Classic Audiobook Collection - The Green World by Hal Clement ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: January 20, 2023The Green World by Hal Clement audiobook. Genre: scifi The planet was an enigma. Among the thousands of inhabitable planets that had been discovered and visited, Veridis alone seemed to defy the laws... of planetary development and evolution. It was extremely young, barely 10 million years had passed since it was completely molten and yet now it was covered with life of all kinds; kinds that should have not had a chance to even begin to develop, much less reach their current stage. To investigate this anomaly among the stars, a team of experienced specialists was sent out to delve further into the mystery and if possible, solve it. Other than the obvious fields of planetology and geology, other specialties were included like paleontology and archaeology. The highly dangerous flora and fauna of the planet do not help at all. So, what is the cause? It lies deeper in the Green Planet than anyone thinks and is much more dangerous than they can ever imagine. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:22:35) Chapter 02 (00:49:47) Chapter 03 (01:12:31) Chapter 04 (01:34:45) Chapter 05 (01:54:51) Chapter 06 (02:08:49) Chapter 07 (02:30:05) Chapter 08 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Green World by Hal Clement Part 1
A zoo can be a rather depressing place, or it can be a lot of fun, or it can be so dull as to make
the mind wonder elsewhere in self-defense.
In fairness to Emerald, Robin Lampert had to conclude that this one was not quite in the last
group.
He had been able to keep his attention on the exhibits.
This was in a way surprising, for,
while a frontier town has a perfect right to construct and maintain a zoo if it wishes,
one can hardly expect such a place to do a very good job.
The present example was it must be admitted not too good.
The exhibits were in fairly ordinary cages, barred for the larger creatures,
glassed for the smaller ones.
No particular attempt had been made to imitate natural surroundings.
The place looked as artificial as bare concrete and iron could
make it. To a person used to the luxuries provided their captive animals by the great cities of
Earth and her sister planets, the environment might have been a gloomier one. Lampert did not feel that
way. He had no particular standards of what a zoo should be, and he would probably have considered
attempts at reproduction of natural habitat a distracting waste of time. He was not a biologist,
and had only one reason for visiting the Emirade Zoo.
The guide had insisted upon it.
There was, of course, some justice in the demand.
A man who was taking on the responsibility of caring for Lampert
and his friends in the jungles of Veriddis had a right to require that his charges know
what they were facing.
Lampert wanted to know himself, so he had read conscientiously every placard on every cage
he had been able to find.
These had not been particularly informative except in one or two cases.
Most of the facts had been obvious from a look at the Cages' inhabitants.
Even a geophysicist could tell that the phelodon, for example, was carnivorous,
after one of the creatures had bared a rather startling set of fangs by yawning in his face.
The placard had told little more, less, in fact, than McLaughlin had already said about the beasts.
on the other hand it had been distinctly informative to read that a small salamander-like thing in one of the glass-fronted cages was as poisonous as the most poisonous of terrestrial snakes
there had been nothing in its appearance to betray the fact it was at this point in fact that lampert began really to awaken to what he was doing he was aroused all the way by mcclachlan's explanation of a number which appeared on a good many of the placards
lampert had noticed it already the number was always it seemed different though always in the same place and bore signs of much repainting it bore no resemblance to any classification scheme that lampert knew and neither of the paleontologists could enlighten him
eventually he turned to mcclachlan and asked not expecting a useful answer since the man was a guide rather than a naturalist however the tall man gave a faint smell
and replied without hesitation.
That's just the number of human deaths known to have been caused by that animal this year.
It did not comfort Lampert too greatly to learn that the year used was that of Veridus,
some seventeen times as long as that of Earth.
For the felonon, the number stood at twelve.
This was not very much when compared to the annual losses from tigers in India during the
19th century, but this reflection was not particularly consoling.
The human population of Veritas was so very small compared to that of India.
Lampert examined the creature thoughtfully.
It was of moderate size as carnivores went, some four feet long without the tail,
and look rather harmless as long as it kept its mouth shut.
It was lying at the center of the cage, so it was difficult to judge the land.
length of its legs.
It showed no trace of the tendency displayed by many captive animals, of lying against
a wall or in a corner when relaxed, and there was none of the restless pacing so characteristic
of Earth's big cats under similar circumstances.
It simply lay and stared back at Lampert, so steadily that he never was sure whether
or not the cold eyes were provided with lids.
I never liked reptiles back home, but I think I like these creatures less."
The voice of Mitsuizi, the little archaeologist, cut into Lampert's reverie.
Don't let Hans are in domi hear you mention them in the same breath with reptiles," he answered.
Well, I'm not fond of frogs either.
I'm afraid that wouldn't make them much happier.
These are not even amphibians.
They certainly are.
I've been told that they lay eggs in water and have it
tadpole stage?
I should have said they aren't amphibiums, with a capital A.
That is, they don't belong to the order amphibia.
Since they are not genetically related to the corresponding order on Earth, as far as we know,
Sulawayo gets quite peeved at people who try to lump terrestrial and extraterrestrial creatures
in the same order.
I believe that whoever decides things for biologists has decreed that on Veridus the
dominant order is to be called amphibids.
It's a quibble, if you like, but I can see why they insist on it.
Hmm, so can I?
Even now you sometimes run into people who go to great length to make you admit that there
are pyramids both in Egypt and Mexico, and for that matter on regular six, and infer from
that that their makers had something in the way of common culture.
I say these things are amphibians without the can.
capital A, because they are at home both on land and in water.
And the dictionary would back me up.
I don't insist that they're related to those of Earth any more than a Mayan pyramid
has anything but geometry in common with an Egyptian one.
But I've heard—I'm sure you have.
But it's a sore subject.
I'll be open-minded if you like and admit that some Egyptians may have been blown
across the Atlantic and taught architecture to the Americans.
but I don't regard it as proved.
What was that remark of yours, as far as we know, in connection with the ancestry of the amphibids?
That's being at least as open-minded as I was, I would say.
In a way, yes, I don't think anyone has seriously suggested that these things originated on Earth.
However, a puzzle we're here to investigate still exists.
How could there be life-forms corresponding to those which took a good-good-old?
A good half-billion years to evolve elsewhere on a planet which, by geophysical evidence,
hasn't been solid for forty million?
Someone certainly has suggested that the world was stocked from outside.
But certainly it hasn't been proved.
I don't think anyone has tried very hard either, and I certainly won't, on a planet with
as much radioactivity as this one.
You think that would account for high-speed evolution?
Lampert shrugged his shoulders and began to stroll toward the next cage.
Ask the paleontologists, my opinion doesn't carry much weight.
Mitsuetsi nodded, started to follow the geophysicist,
and then turned back to stare once more at the carnivore lying a few feet away.
It stared back unblinkingly.
The visit to the zoo was one of several, which continued until Lampert, Mitsuizzi,
and the two paleontologists were able to identify each of a dozen animals which were most
concerned in the death rate of Veridus.
Apparently McClockland was not the only guide who did this.
The zoo was equipped to give a final examination in which any creature the guide desired could
be seen on a television screen from viewpoints quite different from those obtained in front
of the cages.
McLaughlin proved hard to satisfy.
Lampert did not blame him. He knew a lot about Veritas, of course. He had not only read of it
in ordinary reference material, but had done much of the laboratory work on drill-cores
brought from the planet. His name had been one of those attached to the report, giving the probable
age of the planet's crust. At that time, however, the mental picture he held had been
of continent distribution, rock strata, zones of diastrophic stress, and the like.
The question of the appearance or even the existence of plants, animals, and people had simply
never risen to conscious level in his mind.
That had changed, shortly before his arrival.
The tramp spacer, which had brought him and his group to Veritas, had had to orbit about
the world in free fall for several hours, while its obsolete drive elements cool.
and the passengers had examined the planet.
Lampert, oddly enough, had been as much impressed by the nightside as by the sunlit hemisphere.
The latter had shone at twenty thousand kilometers, a fairly standard land and water pattern.
The most unusual thing about it had been the almost perfect uniformity of the land coloration,
a light green which bespoke, or at least implied, a virtually complete covering of vegetation.
By the time the ship had circled to the dark side, however, it was much closer to the surface,
and Lampert would have expected to make out luminous sparks and patches of towns and cities
by the hundreds.
He saw just two, and was not really sure of those.
For the rest, the planet was a vast gray-black circle occulting a portion of the Milky Way.
It was not absolutely black, either.
Its contrast with the background of the galaxy was diminished by the glow in the upper atmosphere,
arising from the recombination of water molecules, dissociated during the day by Beta Libre's
fierce ultraviolet light.
The center of the circle was darker than the edges, with a line of sight penetrated
through more of the luminous gas.
But even this sight, unusual as it was, did not affect Lampert as much as the lack of city
lights. He had done field work in lonely, wild places before, of course, but until now he had
always had the feeling of being in an island of wilderness more or less surrounded by civilization.
On Veritas, it was the civilized spots which farmed the islands, and very small islands they
were. There was no known native intelligent race, and settlements of alien races, such as the men from Earth,
were still few and far between.
So Lampert was prepared for McClockland's care in readying the group for its trip.
He was even glad of it, though he would probably not have admitted to being at all afraid of
the venture.
He would simply have said that it was nice to have a guide who took his responsibilities seriously.
That, of course, did not mean that Lampert was intending to disavow any of his own responsibilities.
He, like McLaughlin, had been.
keeping a careful eye on the other members of the group, looking for the signs of impatience
or ill-temper, which could be the seeds of serious trouble, if the journey were prolonged.
He had come to tentative conclusions about this during the flight from Earth, but was pleased
to see that apparently men who could stand the enforced companionship of a tramp-spacer
were also able to retain their senses of humor in the steam-bath environment of Veritas.
Luayo, of course, had seemed safe from the first.
A man who had spent his formative years in the Congo rainforests, where his ancestors had lived
for generations, was ideal for this world.
His sense of humor was extremely durable.
Lampert suspected that it might sometimes be a little too good.
Miss Weetsy, the archaeologist, had once or twice, appeared to resent some of the young fellow's
remarks, though not to an extent with the old fellow's remarks.
Lampert had felt the need for introducing his own personality into the matter.
Crendel, nearly twice Sulawayo's age, seemed to be a check on the younger man anyway.
He was a member of the same profession, and Sulueo would have been the first to admit
his respect for Crenel's work in the field.
Under the circumstances, Lampert felt that the group was well-matched.
Whether it would be able to do the job it had undertaken was,
another matter.
The news reports had spoken glibly of the expedition which was going to solve the mysteries
of Veritas once and for all.
Lampert, like any other scientist, knew perfectly well that the solution of the present
crop of mysteries about the planet would almost certainly be achieved only at the cost
of creating an even greater number of new ones.
Even the guide, who was admittedly no scientist, had expressed a similar
opinion, though his was based on a general pessimism bred of familiarity with the planet.
However, he had undertaken to get them to the sort of country they wanted, and from then on
the problem with solving was not his affair.
The scientists, whatever may have been their feeling about matters of personal safety,
were eager to start, which tended to cause rapid progress in McLaughlin's Animal Recognition
School.
Another factor tending to are the same result was that there was little in Emerald for such men to do except learn.
The town was still small.
It had a spaceport and airport which furnished little entertainment, docks which could amuse for a while but not indefinitely,
and warehouses which were completely uninteresting to geologists, paleontologist, and archaeologist.
There was no museum.
The numerous specimens of mineral, animal, and vegetable matter collected on a planet invariably
wound up on outbound spacecraft.
The zoo, which the town maintained for purely practical reasons, was about the only thing that
was left.
In consequence, not many days passed before all four scientists were able to meet McLaughlin's
requirements.
Sulawayo was annoyed by the guide's addition of a short postgraduate course in edible flora
and fauna, but admitted that the knowledge might well be useful.
However, he made no secret of his satisfaction when McLaughlin finally announced that,
as far as he was concerned, the journey could begin at any time.
All four re-checked their equipment, that of Lampert was by far the bulkiest,
and everyone satisfied with the group's ability both to live and to work in the steam bath
that was the world of Veritas.
They watched the harbor on which Emerald was located shrink and blend into the rest of the shoreline behind them.
Within a few minutes, only the restless surface of Green Bay was visible through the ever-present haze.
The jaws of the Felodon abruptly stopped moving, and its fore-legged straightened,
bringing the fanged head up and away from the kill it had just made.
If a man had been there, he would neither have seen nor heard the disturbing factor.
For a thunderstorm, a few miles to the west, was emitting an almost continuous growl,
and the towering trees shut out nearly all the sky.
Nevertheless, the beast appeared to sense something out of the ordinary.
It twisted its short but supple-neck ceaselessly, rocking its head from side to side,
to bring first one eye and tympanic membrane to bear on the jungle roof, then the other.
Sometimes it froze motionless for a long moment, and a watcher would have sworn that its
minute brain was struggling with a thought. If this were the case, the thought must have been
both unusual and unpleasant, for under normal circumstances nothing short of overwhelming
force would have driven a phelodon from its meal. Now, however,
the hind leg slowly straightened, and the creature came erect.
For another moment it stood motionless, took a step or two away from the body and stopped again.
Abruptly as though in defiance of some impulse, it turned back, lowered the murderously armed head
and tore a huge mouthful of flesh from the corcus.
Then, like a child leaving the cookie jar as its mother approaches, it leaped away into the underbrush,
still swallowing.
Its speed was high, and it did not have far to go.
The jungle thinned in a few hundred meters to the point where some sky became visible,
and a short distance further the riotous plant growth vanished completely to give place to an open beach.
Here the creature stopped and repeated its search of the hemisphere overhead.
This time it found what it sought.
Along the line of the beach, perhaps a kilometer out to sea, the thing came flying.
It must have been utterly different from anything the Philodon could ever have seen,
but no sign of fear appeared in the beast's demeanor.
It stood on the beach well away from the shelter of the jungle, and certainly in full view
from above, its head following the flying object and a fearful snarl,
which might or might not have been as normal expression.
of hunger, giving its face an almost mammalian cast.
This thing was larger by far than any flying creature the Felodon knew, incomparably larger
than the Felodon itself.
Its details were hard to make out through the hazy air, and would have meant little to the
flesh-eater in any case.
The most noticeable characteristic was the steady whistling hum that proceeded from it.
There was a suggestion of motion, too, which might have been wings or might not.
Actually, the thing was little more than a dark dot against the purplish-blue sky.
At the moment no sunlight was striking it directly, for it was in the shadow of the thunderhead.
Perhaps this prevented the animal below from being bothered by another unusual feature it possessed,
though even the appearance of this last characteristic produced no sign of fear when it finally came.
This occurred shortly after the flying thing passed, while it was still quite close.
It moved out of the shadow of the great cloud, and, as the greenish sunlight struck it,
the eyes of the watching creature were dazzled by a gleam of metal.
This was certainly something it had never seen.
For a native metal on Veritas is just about as common as it was on earth, before men began
to pry it out of its oars.
has an oxygen-rich atmosphere and plenty of moisture, and pure aluminum or chromium just
doesn't occur in that environment. Strange or not, however, the gleam did not appear to
affect the phelodon's rudimentary sense of fear. For just an instant it paused as the flying
thing hummed on into the northeast. Just once it looked back toward the point in the jungle
where it had left its kill, a point from which eloquent sounds were now coming.
coming, betraying the presence of carrion-eaters.
Just one step it took in that direction.
Then it turned away, as abruptly as it had, from the meal a few minutes before.
With the same purposeful air it had displayed on the way out of the jungle,
it headed down the beach and the direction taken by the flying piece of metal.
Though the animal speed was high, the humming soon faded out ahead of it.
However, this did not seem to cause any inconvenience.
The Felodon moved on with a gate that might have been called a fast walk or a slow run,
never hesitating, never pausing.
It remained silent.
Smaller creatures which might have given it a wide berth had they heard the hunting call
now sprang away almost from underfoot.
It paid them no heed, but continued on its way,
while the green sun settled into the jungle behind and to its left.
The fact that its recent kill was now little more than a skeleton did not seem to bother it.
Perhaps it had forgotten.
End of Part 1
Part 2 of the Green World by Hal Clement.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 2
The humming was a little more noticeable in the helicopter cabin, but not much.
John McLaughlin, sprawled as comfortably as his two meters of height would permit in its confines,
had noticed the sound only at first, and after remarking to himself that they seemed to be
building better ion turbines since he had left Earth had permitted his thoughts to wander
in other directions.
These did not concern, Philodons.
The interest there was not at the moment mutual.
The rather crowded cabin offered material enough for consideration.
McLaughlin was not a scientist by training, but neither was he the sort of guide that might
have been found in Newcon or Amazon territory a few centuries back.
He did not despise people merely because they were, by his standards, greenhorns.
He knew that each of the other men now, sharing this cabin with him, was an expert in his
own field, even though some of them, in spite of his training, would have been able to survive
for less than a day in the jungles of Veridus.
After all, why should they have learned such an art?
There were other things worth learning, and one could always hire McLaughlin,
if they need to visit the jungles developed.
Since this particular party had done just that,
they were evidently a fairly practical crew.
They were not talking very much, which from the guy's viewpoint,
was an additional point in their favor.
They already knew what they planned to do,
saw no point in repeating what had already been said. Of course, if they should fail to find
the area they were seeking, there would be talk, all of it aimed at McLaughlin, but he had
no fear on that score. There were few enough mountains on Veritas, and of those few by far the
greater number were volcanic cinder cones. When these scientists had specified a region of
tilted block or folded mountains, the guide had been more than dubious at first.
It had taken him time to recall that there was a small area meeting these specifications,
less than fifteen hundred miles from the spaceport at Emerald.
He was not himself a geologist, but pictures and diagrams had been used freely in explaining
to him just what was wanted, and he was quite certain that the party would be satisfied with
what he had to offer.
A slight rocking in the hitherto steady motion of the helicopter roused him from this
line of reverie. They were already several hours from Emerald, and McLaughlin realized that he should
have been paying more attention to the course. He straightened up in his seat and looked out.
To the left and ahead was a huge thunderhead whose satellite air currents had probably caused
the variation on the helicopter's flight path. More importantly, there was land in sight.
McLaughlin knew that the long flight across Green Bay was over. He waited, however, before saying
anything.
He had given the pilot full instructions as to the route before take-off, and he wanted
to see whether those had been clear enough.
Apparently they had.
Without asking questions or even looking back at the guide, Lampert swung the aircraft from
its northerly heading on to one which paralleled the shoreline, a turn of about forty-five
degrees to the right, and the helicopter resumed its steady flight.
McLaughlin did not relax.
From now on the route was a little more difficult to follow, and there were not too many more hours
of daylight.
The shadowless night glow, which made vision relatively easy after sunset, did not lend itself
to aerial navigation over a very poorly mapped world.
He kept his eyes on the shoreline, watching for the landmarks he had not seen for many months,
and then not from above.
He did not see the phelodon, which became so intensely interested in the helenoccurts.
If he had, he would have attached little importance to the creature's presence, and he could
not possibly have seen its actions in sufficient detail to catch any peculiarities in them.
No one else saw the beast either.
The change in course had roused most of the party from whatever lines of thought they had
been pursuing, as it had, McLaughlin, and most of them were looking out the windows, but they
were interested in what lay ahead, not below.
Sometimes soon the relative monotony of jungle and swamp would be relieved by rising ground, indicating
the nearness of the mountains they sought, and the helicopter's flight altitude of some two thousand feet
was low enough to permit any significant rise of terrain to be visible.
Sulaueo, the younger paleontologist, made a remark to that effect, which passed without comment.
Real conversation did not start for some minutes.
As I understand it, we have one more course change before we see the mountains.
Isn't there a river we have to follow for a time, string?'
Lampert asked the question without looking back.
"'That's right,' McLaughlin replied.
"'It runs into Green Bay from almost straight north,
and about a hundred miles inland makes a turn to the east.
That's general direction.
It winds a lot.
It would.
In country as nearly penipained as this,' muttered Lampert under his breath.
The mountains, you want to start about sixty airline miles from the Big Bend.
If you trust your Gyro-Compass enough you can head for them directly from the river mouth.
If you have any doubt about being able to hold the line, though, follow the river.
I doubt that there are any good landmarks otherwise.
Of course I've only seen the area from the surface and close to the river, but I'd be very
surprised if there was anything around but the swamp and jungle mess were over now.
And I. We'll stay inside of the river, but edges far east as visibility lets us.
The guide approved this plan with a nod, and the conversation lapsed for several minutes.
The silence was finally broken once more by Sulawayo.
I hope these hills we're looking for have something of interest.
This planet is the most monotonous I've seen yet.
Where it is in jungle, it's swamp.
And the only difference between the two is that the jungle grows.
higher trees."
McLaughlin's face crinkled into something like a smile and he sat up once more.
There's one other difference, he remarked.
What's that?
In the jungle dressed and equipped as you are now, you might live as long as a day.
In the swamp, five minutes would be an optimistic estimate."
Sulawayo looked down at the shorts and boots which constituted his costume and shrugged.
I admit the point, but I don't expect to go out this way.
What I actually wear and carry beside my professional equipment is up to you.
Also I was referring to appearances."
Beta Lire Nine looked almost as dull as this world from above, and I'll bet it was at
least as deadly when you reached the surface.
McLaughlin had never visited New She-Ole and admitted it, but it took more than that to stop
Sulueo.
Actually, I was hoping that these hills didn't turn out to be so covered with soil that any fossils would be yards underground at the best.
Do you recall any places where the rock strata themselves were exposed?
Steep cliffs or deep stream gullies, perhaps?
Definitely, yes.
The big river cuts right across the range or else starts in it.
It comes out from a canyon like that of the Colorado on earth, though a lot less spectacularly.
Actually, I don't know anything about the country more than a couple of miles up that canyon.
I was stopped on the river by rapids and couldn't get my amphib out on either side.
For the most part, there simply wasn't any shore, just cliff.
Quite a current, I suppose, Lampert cut in.
Actually, not very much.
I went swimming in worse on earth.
That hardly ties in with steep cliffs and a river cutting through a mountain range.
McLaughlin shrugged.
You're the geologist.
Look it over for yourself.
Maybe you'll just have to add it to the list of things you don't understand about Veritas.
Fair enough, the pilot-commander geophysicist nodded.
I did not mean to imply that you were not reporting accurately,
but the situation you have described would be a trifle queer on more planets than Earth, I assure you.
Still, with luck, your cliffs will show fossils.
Maybe we'll solve one problem in exchange for another.
Life could be worse.
Just hope we don't solve the first one by proving that certain geophysicists have been talking
through their hats, the hitherto silent Crandall remarked.
A? What would you do if we found a chunk of, say, pegmatite with radioactive inclusions
that checked out at half a billion years instead of the thirty-od million you lads have been
giving us as a timescale for this mud ball. I should check very carefully under what circumstances
and in what location you found it. If necessary, I would admit that the problem had disappeared.
Half a billion years would account reasonably well for the evolutionary status of this planet's
life forms, though actually it took Earth a good deal longer to reach a corresponding condition.
Frankly, however, I do not expect any such find. We spotty.
it are borings rather carefully and should have taken pretty representative samples.
I'm sure you did. If your results are right, it means that the problem belongs to Hans and me,
and String here had better find us a lot of fossils.
You have to find your own bones, McLaughlin replied. I'm taking you to the sort of ground
you want. A fossil would have to show its teeth in my face before I'd recognize it, and then
I'd probably shoot before I realized it was dead."
"'All right,' Sulawayo chuckled.
"'You take care of the quick, and Crandall and I will worry about the dead.
Dr. Lampert can figure out how old fossils are, if we find any, and take can look for stone axes.
Are automobiles or pieces of space-drive tubes or other artifacts?'
Mitsuessi answered the implied dig.
"'I plan to sit back in loaf and less and until—'
One of you lads turns up a skull that could have held more than half an ounce of brain.
I am going to be very unscientific.
I believe that there is nothing on this planet for an archaeologist to do,
and I'm not going to work myself into a lather to prove myself wrong.
You've formed an opinion rather early in the game, Lampert remarked.
After all, remarkably little of this world has been explored.
Why should there not be traces of occupations of occupations?
in unknown areas such as we are about to visit.
Because, while most of the planet remains unexplored,
a very large number of places which should have furnished traces of habitation
have failed to do so.
We've surveyed many spots which were or are ideal for cities
based on ocean commerce or market centers for what could be farm areas or space ports.
After a while you get to a point where such a lot of,
finds can be predicted with some certainty.
As I said, I am far from certain, and it would be most unreasonable to say I was, but in the
area we are seeking I see no reason to expect anything of interest to my profession.
Lampert shrugged and brought his full attention back to the controls.
The sun was slowly sinking, bringing into bolder relief the irregularities of the ground as
their shadows lengthened.
However, these irregularities were still few, and the jungle roof was for the most part evenly
illuminated.
As McLaughlin had expected, there was nothing that could be used as a landmark.
In its own way, the forest was as featureless as the ocean.
The pilot kept his gaze riveted ahead, in expectation of the river which the guide had told
them to expect, and presently he saw it.
Reflecting the color of the faintly purplish sky, it stood out fairly well against the gray-green
of the jungle once they were close enough to penetrate the ever-present haze.
With McLaughlin nodding silent approval, Lampert swung the helicopter to the left and proceeded
more nearly straight north, angling gradually toward the river.
Now the jungle took on a little more feature, though still nothing that could be used for guidance.
At fairly frequent intervals a glint of water became visible through the trees directly below them.
Evidently numerous tributaries were feeding into the larger stream, but none of these could be seen from any distance.
For the most part they were so narrow that the trees growing on each side met above them.
"'I should think that one could cover a great deal of that territory in a boat,' remarked Mitsuizzi,
after nearly half an hour in the new direction.
"'You'd need an amphib,' replied the guide.
"'A boat is all right for the mainstream, but all that stuff coming in from the sides is so shallow
that you'd never make progress with anything else.
I've tried most of them in my own crock.
Every time I've had to crawl rather than float before I was a mile from the river.'
"'How was the ground? Swamp?'
"'No, it's fairly solid for the most part.
It doesn't show very well yet, even with the sun as low as it is, but the general ground level
is pushing up slowly all along here.
We'll be in sight of your mountains before too long.
This declaration brought all members of the group to the windows, all five pairs of eyes
covering the quadrant of vision below and ahead.
The meandering river was now on their left, but just visible through the haze ahead of them
was the eastward turn McLaughlin had predicted.
Lampert headed a little more to the right in an attempt to cut the final corner,
but the helicopter reached the winding purplish band before their goal came in sight in spite of this effort.
The flyer hummed on.
The bars of sunlight admitted by the side ports had been nearly horizontal when the turn to the east cut them off.
They were only slightly more so when McLaughlin gave a satisfied grunt,
and nodded forward. The others followed his gaze.
Straight ahead, little could be seen because of the bright spot familiar to every flyer.
The shadowless area directly opposite the sun centered on the aircraft's own shadow.
To either side, however, the promised hills rose out of the jungle to height succeeding the present
flight altitude of the helicopter.
Presumably the canyon from which the river was supposed to emerge,
lay in their paths.
So, at any rate, Lamper remarked, and McLaughlin confirmed him.
"'And cruise pretty slowly from here on,' the guide added.
"'There are a number of hills on this side of the range.
Even if you're not worried about running into one of them, you may want to examine them for
exposed rocks.'
"'Mightn't it be better to find a spot to park before the sun goes down?'
countered the pilot.
"'It might.
What I said still holds, though.
You haven't much chance of finding one inside the canyon without quite a long search, and it will
be best to stay this side of the range until sunrise.
Remember my trouble in finding a beach for the amphib while I was inside.
All right.
Can we land to the jungle, though?
Not unless you want to fold the blades in flight and drop the last twenty to fifty feet.
Hunt for a fairly high hill.
They're usually somewhat bare on top.
and you'll at least have room for the rotors to swing.
If you don't like that or can't find a suitable hilltop,
land on the river and tie up to the shore.
But again, don't try that in the canyon.
You're unlikely to find anything to tie up to.
This machine has good lights, I suppose you realize.
But then you know the planet.
As far as I'm concerned, which you say goes,
are the chances of a hill equally good on either side of the river?
Maybe a little better to the north.
The ground looked higher that way when I came out of the canyon.
Lampert obediently eased the flyer's course a trifle to the left, and everyone aboard watched
the ground as it began to rise toward them.
At first the hills were merely low mounds, as jungle covered as the level ground, but very
quickly these gave way to higher, steeper rises, on whose tops the larger trees grew very sparsely.
one of these was quickly selected after a brief questioning glance from lampert to the guide and the helicopter began to descend we'd better take what we have now mcclachlan amplified the nod with which he had answered the pilot
this belt of hills is pretty narrow and we'd be into the main range in another minute or two do you know whether the other side is as abrupt or whether lampert's question was cut short by an exclamation from mitsuitzi
Rob! Hold it a moment. Lampert was a good pilot. The increase in rotor-blade pitch under
his deft fingers brought the helicopter's descent to as nearly an instant halt as was possible
to anything airborne. Not until he had also checked horizontal drift. Did he look in the
direction the archaeologist was indicating? By then everyone had seen what had attracted Mitsouizi's
attention. Between the hill on which Lampert had intended to land and the river were several
lower eminences. These were now almost directly south of the helicopter, and every detail
upon them was shown in exaggerated relief by shadows stretching to the east. It was one of these
hills which Mitsuizzi was examining with the utmost care. It was covered with jungle, like the rest,
but a curious regularity was visible.
The trees appeared at this distance, to be of the usual species,
but some of them towered over their fellows by a good thirty or forty feet.
This in itself was not odd.
The whole jungle was studded with such projections.
However, on this hill the taller trees seemed to have been planted in orderly rows.
Five solid lines of them were visible extending roughly nine,
north and south, so that their long shadows made them stand out sharply.
They were separated from each other by perhaps a quarter of a mile.
Running at right angles to them were other less outstanding rows of vegetation.
Lampert was not quite sure that these were not the product of his own imagination,
since the trees which formed them rose little, if any, above the general level.
The whole hilltop, however, suggested something to every man who saw.
saw it.
The archaeologist was the first to give voice to the impression.
That was a city!"
No one answered.
Some of the scientists must have thought that he was jumping from one opinion to its direct
opposite on the strength of some rather feeble evidence, but the thought went unvoiced.
They simply looked, except for Suluweo, who moved to turn a camera on the scene.
Rob, can we land there now?
Lampert had anticipated this question, but could have answered it without hesitation
in any case.
Sure, if you don't mind using strings method of folding the blades and falling in.
The archaeologist turned to the guide.
Will it be hard to get there on foot from this hill we're headed for?
McLaughlin shrugged.
From two hours to a day, depending on undergrowth.
We have torches.
We can burn our way if the vegetation is dense.
Half a day, then.
You'll still have to let the steam clear pretty often.
There is little wind below the trees, and the air is saturated.
Well, that place will be worth more than a day of anyone's time.
Maybe tomorrow we can hold up a moment take, Lampert cut in before Mitsuizi could develop
his plan further.
If you take string out to that hill before take off tomorrow, what do the rest of us do for
the day or week?
before you get back?"
What we better do is note this place, go on to the canyon, set up camp, get the fossil
hunting going, and after our routine is set up, and we know the more common dangers of the
neighborhood, perhaps we can spare McLaughlin for a day or two so that you can look over
your city if that's what it is."
Lampert's last few words banished the hurt expression from the little man's face.
What do you mean if?
What else could make a pattern like that?
that. It must have been streets. Or a joint system in the rock below, trapping enough water or
draining enough off, to permit superior growth along the joint lines. Or a system of tilted
strata doing the same thing. If it's the latter it's just the sort of thing you want to.
It should bring fossils near the surface. The pilot nodded slowly. You do make it sound
more attractive. Still, I think we'd better follow the original plan. It
except that I may come with you myself when we do get around to looking that hill over."
He turned back to the controls and resumed their descent.
Mitsouizi subsided once more to his seat.
The archaeologist realized the wisdom of Lampert's decision, but did not particularly enjoy
the enforced weight.
His face showed the fact until Sulawayo opened the camera he had been using and passed him
the sheaf of Prince on which the city appeared.
As the young paleontologists had expected, these so occupied the little man's attention that
he did not even notice the landing.
The helicopter settled to the hilltop which Lampert had chosen, in the center of a quadrangle
of trees growing just far enough apart to give clearance to the rotors.
The sun was nearly gone.
It had vanished in the haze as they dropped below flight altitude.
McLaughlin knew that in all too short a time it would be as dark as Veridus ever became.
The knights could be dangerous.
There was quite enough light to deceive a man into thinking he could see clearly,
and an inexperienced wanderer might not realize until too late that details were not really distinct,
and that there was no clue to direction in the shadowless glow.
McLaughlin himself could use the moons, but he doubted that any other member of the party
could do so. They, or their motions, took knowing. He was pleased to note that there was no general
rush to the door as the great blades whistled gently to a stop. The scientists turned to him,
but remained where they were. No words were spoken, but Lampert's relinquishment of command
was evident. McLaughlin unfolded his length from the seat.
There are two choices, he said. We can sleep in the copter.
or outside?
The first will be a trifle cramped, but the second will require either a double circle of charged
wire or two armed guards on constant watch.
With no offense meant, I doubt that anyone but myself in this group would qualify as a
night guard.
Why a double circle of wire? asked Lampert.
The wire will stop only an animal in control of its motions when it makes contact.
If a phelodon were to spring from a little distance, it might not like the wire, but it could
hardly stop until it reached the ground, and there should be a similar barrier ahead of it.
We could use a lethal voltage.
Even if you want to take the risk, what is lethal to a phelodon will be equally so to a man,
you'll have the insulation problem.
There's always a darn good chance of rain before morning, and we might as well stay in
inside, then. We have the electric equipment, but it will take quite a while to set it up, and
it hardly seems worth the trouble for a one-night stand. As you say, it will be a little crowded here,
but we've all slept under worse conditions. Would anyone rather set up the fence?"
There was no answer to this question. At Lampert's direction a meal was served and eaten.
Then the scientists settled down for the night, some to sleep at once, others to review plans
our recheck equipment. Mitsuizi occupied himself with making careful measurements of the photographs he
had been given. He was the last asleep. Scores of miles to the southwest, the Felodon reached the
river. It was no longer on the coast, sometimes since it had swerved inland. A casual compass check
would have revealed that it was still heading straight for the now-grounded helicopter. Even
MacLoughlin could not have told what led the creature on, familiar as he was with the animals
of Veritas, but no one who had watched the thing since the flying machine had passed could
have doubted its goal.
Actually it was now on the same bank of the river as the helicopter, but whatever guided
it pointed across the great stream.
Without hesitating, the amphibed plunged into the water.
Part 3 of the Green World by Hal Clement.
This Librivox recording is in the public domain.
Part 3
The men were awake well before sunrise.
The human body takes a long, long time to accustom its physiological cycle
to a change in something as fundamental as the length of day.
But they did not attempt to resume flight until the green star was once more in the sky.
Mitsubesi put forth a tentative suggestion that the interval be spent in a visit to the city
site he had seen the night before, but McLaughlin vetoed it.
Going on foot through the jungle at night is a fool's game, though I admit people sometimes
get away with it.
I could get you there, but even if we turned around and came back immediately, there'd be
a lot of time wasted.
Dr. Lampert went over all that last night.
Look, that hill of yours is right by the river.
After we've set up in the main camp it will be relatively easy to drop down to it.
We have collapsible boats.
Unless we camp above the rapids you won't even have to fly.
Even if we're farther upstream and do have to use the copter, the trip will only take a few minutes.
Mitsui Tsi had agreed, though with evident reluctance.
No one else had any desire to go out.
was not enough rock exposed on the hilltop to excite the paleontologists.
The hill itself presented nothing unusual to Lampert's geophysical eye, and McLaughlin was in no
hurry to get to work.
They waited therefore until the claw, Lampert had recalled Bet Libre's Arabic name, had risen
and the sky glow had been replaced by its emerald brilliance.
Then the journey was resumed.
It took, as McLaughlin had said the
had said the night before, only a few minutes. The hill where they had slept was less than
five miles from the face of the mountain range. Only the haze of the night before had prevented
their seeing it. The river emerged from a canyon, some fifteen hundred feet in depth, a couple
of miles to the south of their eastward course line. Lampert, in hopes that the usual
haze might not be too evident at this hour, climbed above the level of the cliff-top,
to get an idea of the mountain range as a whole, but he was disappointed. For nearly an hour
he cruised over the area, now several thousand feet above the western cliffs, and then well below them.
It slowly became evident that the range represented a single block, which had been tilted
upward on the west side. The opposite slopes were very gentle, merging so gradually into the general
pinnoplane level of the continent, that it was impossible to say decisively just where the range
ended. The river did originate somewhere beyond the range, cutting entirely through it,
and as the guide had said, its current was not particularly swift. Lampert had much explaining
to do. After all, water should have drained toward the low side of the block. It seems evident,
he summed up his ideas as they hovered once more over the western cliffs, that the river
was here before this particular bit of block tilting occurred.
This planet does have some diastrophic forces left in its crust, in spite of its generally
smooth nature.
Apparently this just represents the end of a long period of rest, such as the Earth has
had several times.
As a matter of fact, I have no business calling at the end of such a period.
it might be fifty million years before the world will be generally mountainous again?"
"'Why do you say again, Rob?' asked Grindel.
"'According to findings of your own colleagues, this planet has hardly been solid for forty million years.
Could it be this flat now, if it had ever been markedly mountainous in that time?'
Good point. I don't know, but would be inclined to doubt it.
Well, we'll cancel the again if it will make you happy.
In any case, the block-forming this range came up slowly enough so that even this river,
with its relatively low-cutting power, was able to keep pace with it and not be deflected.
Probably, he glanced at Mitsubizi.
The rock of which it is made will turn out to be quite strongly jointed.
It looks rather that way from above, the river course, I mean.
A lot of right-angle or what were once right-angle bins.
We'd better go down and look for a camp along the river somewhere, put in Mitsuii.
Let's start at the cliff's end.
Then we may wind up reasonably close to that hill, and I still want to look it over,
joints or no joints.
Fair enough, Lampert eased the helicopter once more downward,
until they were only a few hundred feet above the jungle,
moved along the cliff face until they reached the canyon, and very cautiously, entered.
His caution proved unnecessary.
The air currents in no way resemble the treacherous hodge-podge he had expected, at least not over the center of the river.
A steady wind was blowing into the canyon mouth, but did not seem to be eddying very much even at the numerous bins.
To the archaeologist's annoyance, two sets of rapids were passed before a place was reached where the bank was wide enough for a campsite.
At this point a fairly large side canyon entered the main one from the north.
Where its central stream joined the main river, a gravelly area several acres in extent, offered itself for the purposes of the scientists.
Lampert brought the helicopter down on this surface.
The surroundings looked promising.
The cliffs facing both canyons looked reasonably accessible on foot for some distance, at least along their basis.
Climbing appeared to be impracticable, for the most part, as the rock walls rose sheer except for the occasional
joints, which Lambert had predicted, but the material was certainly sedimentary, and everyone
but the guide tumbled out of the flyer with a glow in his eyes, which promised a speedy scattering
of the party.
With some difficulty, McClockland got them together.
A sight, some twenty yards square, was selected against one of the cliffs and fenced off.
The big prefabricated sheet metal tent was erected, and its tiny conditioning unit installed.
sleeping and cooking gear were placed inside that completed geologists hammers appeared as though by magic and mcclachlan realized that he had better do some explaining before he lost a scientist or two once more he called them together
all right gentlemen i admit the necessary camp work has been done and there should be nothing to keep you from your projects still there are some things you had better understand having canyon walls on all the
sides does not make this place safe. Every carnivore and poison lizard on this planet could get to us
by way of the river, even the ones which look like land animals. Every one of them could swim
underwater from a point out of sight in either direction to where you are standing, and if you
think he would have to come up at least once to judge your position guess again, I don't know
how they do it and neither does anyone else. But a phelodon could submerge around the
bend up there, come up behind the helicopter out of sight of any one of us, and be waiting
when we marched around the machine.
Therefore, go armed at all times.
I know you want to cover a lot of ground and can't stick in one party.
But I insist that you do not go anywhere alone.
Take at least one companion, preferably one who is not a member of your own field.
If you two paleontologists are together, for example, it seems more.
likely that you'll be found with your heads in the same hole in the rock.
When one of you has to dig, make sure the other has his neck on a swivel.
I know this will slow your work, but not as much as if the work had to wait for a new
investigating team from Emerald, or from Earth.
You've seen most of the dangerous animals in the zoo at Emerald, so I won't waste time describing
them.
Just remember that you won't always hear them coming.
have to use your eyes.
All right, Dr. Lampert, you're the boss as far as the scientific work goes.
Who does what and where?
The geophysicist gave no sign of having detected the humor in the guide's remark, but began
speaking at once.
I should say that the main canyon upstream and the side one in the same direction should
be covered first.
We've already used up a good deal of today and would waste more breaking out the boats.
And Dami and I will go up the mainstream.
Hans and Take can take the other.
Don't hurry.
If anything looks good, take the time to investigate it on the spot.
Of course, if it is obviously a major job just to mark it and go on.
There's no sense in one man trying to examine a six-foot lizard skull.
Since the region must have been at sea when the limestone was deposited,
there's not much chance of land animals.
However, we want as complete a chronological series as possible, so do the best you can on this
level.
We'll try for higher formations later.
There should be plenty farther up river if this block is tilted the way it seems to be.
String, perhaps you'd better go with Take and Hans.
Set out when you're ready.
Be back in—he glanced automatically at the narrow strip of purplish blue sky, then at his watch.
Four hours, then we'll compare notes.
After that we can either concentrate on one place or the other,
or break out the boats and cross the streams, as indicated.
Twenty minutes later, the parties were out of sight of each other and the helicopter.
Lampert has spent the first few minutes of the walk wondering whether he had been too obvious
in arranging for both the guide and Crendel to accompany the little archaeologist.
But he quickly convinced himself that McLaughlin's speech had covered the arrangements pretty well.
In any case, he would probably have been distracted soon enough.
The cliffs were interesting.
Limestone, evidently as expected, but rather dense at that.
Maybe some barium replacing the calcium?
Or was the gravity different enough to destroy his judgment for such a small fragment?
Probably not.
He was actually using inertia more than weight in making his estimate.
Anyway, the stuff was certainly accarbonate.
It frothed satisfyingly under a drop of acid from Lampert's kit.
And there were fossils.
Sulileo's form was bent over a spot on the cliff face, examining minutely, but Lampert
could see others from where he stood.
None seemed remarkable.
Most were rather evidently shellfish.
He carefully refrained from giving them names according to the genera they resembled in
rocks. Sulawayo and his colleagues frowned on the practice, which could be most misleading.
He could not, however, resist the temptation to think of them as scallops.
What do you have there, Endami? He knew the other would not have spent so long on any shellfish.
Not sure precisely. Maybe vertebrae, maybe not. What could be armor, and what could be
ribs all mixed up, I think I'll mark it for future.
reference.
I suppose it'll be another Devonian, what's it, like everything else on this planet,
when you do decide.
Pennsylvania would better describe the world as a whole, barring that you may be right.
Rob, if you'd give me a hand here, we could get some basic work done.
A?
You say this is a tilted block, in lowest formations right now.
I'd like to get photos, and, if possible, specimens of his measurements of his
many different varieties of shellfish as possible at each level.
Then it may be possible to set up some sort of temporal sequence and use the things as
index fossils if animals do evolve on this benighted mud ball.
If you could get me some radioactive dates at two or three nicely separated levels,
it would also help.
Thanks, returned Lampert dryly.
I could use material like that myself.
I can tell you what you probably already know.
You're not likely to get anything of the sarah.
from limestone.
Well, intrusions are always possible.
You watch for him, then.
The pair went to work.
Two hours out, a little more than one back.
There was no one at the helicopter when they reached it, but the other group came in only a few
minutes over the four-hour limit which Lampert had imposed.
A comparison of notes over the meal which had been quickly prepared indicated that the
the second group had gone farther in point of miles covered, but had accomplished less work.
Crandall had had the same idea as Suluweo, but he had not attempted to carry it out since
his canyon did not cut across the range, and would presumably not furnish a continuous change
in formations. Lampert and Sulaweo, as it happened, had not found any evidence of change
themselves. The last fossils they had found were at least superficially identical.
with the first. There was the usual evidence of bedding, and it had been quite evident geometrically
that the walk had taken them to originally higher and presumably later levels. But in what
must have been eight hundred feet or more of original deposit, there seemed to have been
no significant change in the fossil life. What eight hundred feet would mean in point of time,
of course, no one had the least idea. There was not even a good guess as to how
fast carbonates might be expected to precipitate in a viridian ocean.
Anyone could compute the carbonate-ion equilibrium between atmosphere and sea,
but no one knew anything to speak of about carbonate-precipitating organisms of the planet.
Mitsouizi changed the subject slightly at this point.
"'We found several of the joints you predicted,' he said to Lampert.
"'Oh, very wide?
We didn't spot anything that was obviously a joint.
But there are several small-side canyons all narrow enough for us to wade or jump their central streams,
which might have started life that way.
Ours were quite narrow and more traces of volcanic ash at the bottoms.
"'A? That's right, Rob.
Here's a bit of it I brought back.
I thought you might want a little corroboration on that one.'
Crendle handed over a bit of crumbly, tough as he spoke.
Lampert examined it with purse-lips.
Maybe we'd better get back into the air and search the neighborhood for volcanoes, he said at last.
I can't bring myself to believe in two full mountain-building cycles on this planet,
and if I could I'd have a hard time swallowing the idea of these limestone layers coming up,
going down, and coming up again on altered.
How deep were these volcanic deposits?
Variable, shallowest in the wider joints, in the very narrow ones up out of sight.
Suggesting that they've been washing out for some time since the original settling,
anything organic in them?
Nothing's turned up yet.
Do they extend below the present river level, or what?
They're at least down to it.
We couldn't do any major excavating.
If they run much below, muttered Lamarrow.
I'll join the roster of geophysicists who have been driven off the rails by this woozy world.
Well, let's assume as a work in hypothesis that the volcanic activity is relatively recent.
That will at least have the advantage of keeping me sane until something comes up to disprove it.
He finished his meal in silence, while McClockland gave a reproving lecture on the matter of waiting.
There was still a little daylight to go when all the men had.
had eaten, and Lampert, Sulueo, and the archaeologist took the helicopter up the main canyon
to check on the possibility of walking to any really new deposits. They were sure, from changes
of color already seen at various levels up the cliff face, that these existed, but it appeared that the
lowest of them did not reach river level for more than a dozen miles. The distance was less map-wise,
but the canyon, winding back and forth around what the geophysicist still felt must be joint-bounded
blocks, went a good two miles in other directions for each one that it led eastward.
Realizing this, the explorers lifted the helicopter and began checking as close to the cliffs
as Lampert dared at higher levels. In this way, they worked back toward the campsite.
Once again, it was Mitsui who first spotted something of major interest.
"'Found another city take?' asked Sulueo at the others call.
"'Not exactly. It's—well, I guess it's really a system of those joints you keep talking about.
Still, it looks awfully regular. He sounded a little wistful?'
"'It does,' the paleontologist nodded slowly.
"'As you say, it's probably a joint system. Also, it's probably full of volcanic ash,
if my eyes don't deceive me.
Rob, what's the chance of landing on one of the shells?
There are at least three formations accessible on foot from that point,
and I could get some more tuft samples to make or break your peace of mind
while I was doing my own work.
Lampert examined the area carefully.
Like Earth's Grand Canyon, this one receded from time to time in shelves
where softer layers of rock had worn further back,
or the aerogenic processes had paused to give the river a longer bite at that level.
The cracks Mitsuisi had seen formed a neat criss-cross pattern at the top of one of the shelves.
Some of them betrayed their nature by emerging from its vertical face.
It was admittedly an unusually small-scale joint pattern, at least for this mountain system,
and might well contain readable evidence of the forces which had shaped the area.
However, they had only one helicopter.
Lampert slowly shook his head in thecation.
I'm afraid not, Ndami.
Your shells may be big enough, but they're not level enough.
I'd have to make a swinging landing, and I'm not that good a pilot.
Well, how about letting me down on the ladder?
We have a hundred feet of that, so you could be up above the next shelf while I went down.
You'd have plenty of blade clearance.
The next level goes back a couple of hundred feet.
That might be all right, Lampert spoke hesitantly.
You certainly have the right to risk your own neck on the climb if you want to.
We won't try tonight, though.
I'd like to check with string on the advisability of your being there alone.
The place looks pretty hard to reach for anything that doesn't fly,
and I don't know of any really dangerous flying things on this world,
but we'd still better check.
All right with me.
I just as soon have a full day anyway.
If Endami will be spending a day alone up here,
how about having String take me to the other place and settle that point once and for all?
asked Mitsuizzi, as the helicopter east downward toward the camp.
That would still leave Hans and you to form another team for whatever else you want to do.
That should be all right.
It'll depend, though, on whether String thinks it's safe for a man to work.
alone on that shelf.
The proposition was put to McLaughlin as soon as the machine was landed.
To Lampert's surprise, the guide gave a qualified approval.
Remember, he concluded, I don't know what lives on the cliffs.
It's a country I've never covered.
All I'm saying is that no Viridian animal I know of could get there except flying ones,
and they're nothing to worry about, especially in the daytime.
i'd like to go with you to look over the place when you take him up to-morrow and strongly recommend that he carry a communicator as well as a weapon but unless i see something you haven't mentioned when i do go i would say it was all right
once more the phelodon reached the river but this time it did not cross it was no longer heading straight far the helicopter hills had not altered its course but the cliffs had not altered its course but the cliffs had not yet
had.
They formed a wall on its right which was too nearly vertical for its agility and strength.
Even this barrier, however, had caused no visible hesitation or doubt.
It had swerved, followed the base of the wall to the point where the river emerged, and plunged
in as promptly as it had done before.
Few amphibians have ever lost the art of swimming when their larval gills vanished.
The feeble current meant nothing to the Philodon.
It turned upstream and went on its way.
End of Part 3.
Part 4 of the Green World by Hal Clement.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 4.
Indami Sulueo had pursued his occupation on terraces of Earth's Grand Canyon,
on cliff sides of Fomalalt Fort's highest range,
and in bad lands on the dimly lighted Antares 12.
The physical hazards of his present position troubled him little.
McCleachlan had agreed that the ledge where the paleontologists had been left
was inaccessible to the larger carnivores and had merely issued a final warning about poisonous lizards.
The primary danger, as nearly a Sulawayo could see, was that something might happen to the helicopter.
He certainly could not rejoin the others on foot.
He was facing a sheer wall.
some sixty feet high.
A score of yards behind him, the terrace ended in another straight drop of several hundred
feet.
A quarter of a mile on either side, the flat surface ended, to the west, by narrowing until
the two walls became one.
At the other end it was cut off as far as he was concerned, by a joint penetrating
apparently the full depth of the canyon.
There were several other cracks in the wall facing him, like those in the tribunal, which
those in the tributary canyon explored by Crendel and Mitsuizzi, these were packed with volcanic detritus.
This was hard to reconcile with the suggestion that erosion had been long at work.
In such a case, the higher portions should have washed away long before the material found at
the canyon bottom.
Examination at close range suggested a possible explanation.
The Tuff at this point was fairly well cemented.
It seemed reasonable to suppose that the joints had been present before the mountains had started
to rise, that a volcanic mud flow had filled them with detritus, that the new material had
then been cemented by dissolved material coming from above.
This would make the top levels of the Tuff more resistant than those lower down,
where the cemented minerals had not reached, and account for what had been seen
so far. The hypothesis also implied a plentiful supply of fossils. Volcanic mud flowing into a crack in
the ground should carry plenty with it. Sulawayo set to work with a hammer and was presently
soaking with perspiration. He was tempted to remove some of his clothing, but this had been
treated chemically to repel Viridian insects and caution prevailed. McLaughlin had not
mentioned any dangerous biters or stingers, and in all probability his blood would not be to the
taste of any such creatures of this world.
But if the mosquito or tick did not learn that fact until after it had tried, Sulawo
would hardly profit by it.
In any case, the temptation to strip passed quickly.
In only a few minutes his attention was fully occupied by his work, for the expected fossils
proved to be present in very satisfactory numbers.
Most seemed rather fragmentary.
Apparently the original creatures had been tumbled about rather badly before the medium-hardened.
However, the remains were definitely bones, as he had expected and hoped.
For some time Sulaueo was occupied, alternately digging out more fragments,
and trying to fit the more hopeful-looking specimens together, although he had no success
at the latter job.
Then evidence of a more complete set of remains appears.
appeared, and he instantly slowed down to the incredibly meticulous procedure which marks
a paleontologist anywhere in the universe.
At this time he had cut perhaps a foot into the tough for the full three-foot width of the crack,
and from terrace level up to about his own height.
In spite of its apparently firm texture, the rock was extremely soft, and the old question
about erosion was reappearing.
Big pockets of extremely crumbling material had been responsible for most of his speed.
Now, however, with the usual perversity of the inanimate, a firmer substance was encountered,
apparently encasing the bones he suspected of existing a little farther on.
This combined with his increased care to bring almost to a halt the removal of rock from the cleft.
The bones were there.
Perhaps they had been betrayed by a discoloration of the rock too faint for him to have noticed
consciously.
Perhaps something more subtle is involved in the makeup of a successful field worker in paleontology,
but as flake after flake of the matrix fell away under his attack, a shape gradually
took form.
At first a single bone, which might have been an unusually short digit, or an unusually
long carpal, or, of course, something totally.
unrelated to either, was outlined.
Then another, close enough to suggest that their lifetime relationship might have been maintained.
And another.
Sulueo failed to hear the approach of the helicopter, until its rotor wash from a hundred
feet above, lifted the dust about his ankles.
Knowing that Lampert would be having trouble holding that close to the cliffside,
the paleontologist reluctantly hooked his equipment to his belt, and started to
started up the ladder. Five minutes later they were back at camp, with Crendel listening eagerly
to Sulueo's description of his find. "'It's certainly a vertebrae, Hans. That stuff can't
possibly be shell or wood. It's almost certainly a land-dweller, likely enough in that sort
of rock anyway, because I got enough uncovered to be nearly certain that it's a foot, certainly
a limb that would not be needed by a swimmer. Like an Icteosophers.
are, queried Lampert innocently.
Sulueao grinned.
Quite possibly.
More likely one of our ubiquitous amphibs, though.
Certainly something worth getting out, since the general idea is to get an evolutionary sequence
of some sort.
I suppose that means you'll want me to date the eruption which filled all these cracks with
detritus, then?
Sure.
But there's no hurry.
Tomorrow will do.
Lampert found he had no answer to this, and Mitsuizzi managed to edge into the discussion.
He had spent the day with McLaughlin, as he had hoped, and mere failure to find paving-stones
had not damped his order.
I suppose you and Hans will both want to go up the cliff tomorrow, he remarked.
In that case, Rob might as well stay with string and me.
It will speed up the digging back at my hill.
Are you still scraping me?
Dirt off that thing? asked Sulaueo in mock surprise. Didn't one day indicate that it was a joint
pattern like the rest? Not yet. We haven't gotten down to rock over any place where your cracks
should be. The root tangle of the taller trees slows the digging. I admit the rock is limestone,
like the cliff, but there's still no evidence why those trees grow so regularly.
That's just what we've been saying all along. But you can't.
keep looking for the remains of a city.
I gathered Endami from your recent conversation that you were digging for a land animal
on the basis of three bones.
Either you are working on a hunch which destroys your right to criticize, or you are
reasoning from knowledge not available to the rest of us.
In the latter case, you should at least be open-minded enough to credit me with equivalent
knowledge in my own field.
It was Sulueo's turn to have nothing to say.
He had honestly supposed that the archaeologist had been taking the city hypothesis no more seriously than the rest.
He apologized at once, and peace was restored.
Lampert sealed it by agreeing to Mitsuitz's suggestion.
The rest of the evening was spent in detail planning by the two groups.
At sunset, all turned in to sleep behind the protection of the electrified fence.
Even the guide regarded this as an adequate.
with safeguard.
Apparently his opinion was shared by at least one other.
The Philodon had spent most of the day underwater, part of the time in the canyon,
fairly close to Lampert and Crendel, and later down the stream by the site where the
guide and archaeologist had been working.
At neither place had it emerged or shown the slightest sign of wanting to attack.
McLaughlin's reference to the strange instinct of the creatures seemed
to justify.
It certainly could not see the men, but just as certainly was aware of their presence.
What it was about the alien visitors that exercised such an influence on the minute
brain of the carnivore, no one could have said, then.
Any watcher who had supposed from its earlier actions that it was moved by a desire for
new and different taste sensations would have had to discard the notion now.
With the men safely settled down behind their fence, the beast suddenly turned back downstream.
It had returned to the campsite at the end of the working day.
In an hour it was in the jungle below the canyon.
In another it had killed and was feeding as it had the moment before the home of the helicopter
had first attracted its attention.
This time, it finished the meal in peace, and, once finished, did not show immediate.
signs of its former obsession. Instead, it sought a lair and relaxed, blending so perfectly into
the undergrowth and remaining so silent, that within a few minutes small animals were passing
only feet away from the concealed killer. Robin Lampert was only a fair statistician,
but if he had been acquainted with the moves of that phelodon during the last few days,
even he would have been willing to take oath that more than chance was involved.
He would probably have wanted to dissect the animal in search of whatever mechanism was
controlling it, but Robin Lampert knew nothing of the creature.
Neither did Takahiko Mitsuii, and that was rather unfortunate, for the lair it had selected
was on the same hill as the archaeologist's digging site, and a scant quarter-mile away from
the pit Mitsuizi had left.
The rising of the green sun was not visible the next morning.
The ever-present mist had thickened into a solid layer of cloud, and hissing rain cut the
visibility to a few hundred yards.
The helicopter felt its way down the hill with radar, landed on the river, taxied on its
floats to the bank, and was moored.
Lampert, McClockland, and Mitsuizzi emerged, the scientist laden with apparatus, and star
up the hill toward the site. The guide carried only his weapons. The equipment was not of the
Sart Mitsubizi was accustomed to using. It actually belonged to Lampert. Normally it would
not be used in an archaeological dig any more than it would have been had they been
fossil hunting, for neither activity takes kindly to any sort of automatic digging machinery.
Lampert had suggested its use, however, in order to get a rapid
idea of the nature of the soil cover, bedrock, and joint structure of the hill.
If evidence warranted, it would be abandoned for the slower methods of digging.
If not, a few hours would permit them to learn as much about the area as many days of work
with slower equipment.
The hole Mitsouizi had already dug was part way up the hill in a space cleared of underbrush
by a flamethrower.
Several other such clearings were in the neighborhood.
As the archaeologist had said, he had made more than one attempt at digging which had been
frustrated by roots.
Somewhat to Lampert's surprise, it was possible to tell even from ground-level the orientation of
the taller trees which had been so prominent from the air.
Even the smaller plants showed signs of some underground influence.
Between the tallest trees, tracing out the straight lines of the men had seen from above,
the underbrush formed an almost impenetrable wall.
Elsewhere foot travel was easy, though the surface was by no means barren.
Lampert understood how indeed there might have been difficulty in digging on one of the
fertile lines and admitted as much.
That's the trouble, responded Mitsuitsi.
I'd right to get down right at such a point to see what's underneath.
It seems to me that paving might be responsible.
if they'd use the right materials.
Lots of civilizations have used organic substances which decay to good fertilizer.
Then there might be the remains of a sewage system, which would account for richer soil,
after the time which must have passed since the place was buried?
It has happened.
In such a case, of course, trace elements rather than nitrates or phosphates, would are responsible.
That's what I suspect here.
But wouldn't it be better to dig where you actually have in the middle of a block if that's what it is?
Then you'd be fairly certain to hit a building, which should be richer ground than a street.
Only if you actually strike artifacts.
The building itself might be much less well-preserved than a paved street.
However, you are the one who's handling the mechanical mole.
Dig where you want and see what you can learn about this hilltop.
Just get me at least a couple of cores for my streets before you're done, please."
Lampert nodded and proceeded to assemble his equipment.
The mole was a cylinder about five centimeters in diameter and three times as long.
A cutter-lined mouth occupied one end, while the other was attached to a snaky appendage,
which was wound on a fair-sized drum.
A set of control knobs and indicators were mounted near the center of the drum.
drum.
The geophysicist set the cylinder on the ground, mouth downward, pushing it into the soft
earth far enough to assure its remaining upright.
Then he turned to his controls, and after a moment, with very little noise, the cylinder
began to sink into the ground.
In a few seconds it was out of sight, trailing its snaky neck after it.
The men watched in silence.
Perhaps thirty seconds after it disappeared, there was a minor convulsion in the neck, a momentary
rising hum from the machinery, and a plug of dirt about two centimeters in diameter, and five
long was ejected from a port in the center of the drum.
This was seized by Lampert, and examined briefly then tossed aside.
The soil is pretty deep, he remarked.
How far down did that come from? asked Mitsouizi.
That's the sampling interval I've set it in for now.
If it meets anything much harder or easier to penetrate, it will warn me, and I'll grab
them more frequently.
Conversation lapsed while two more samples arrived and were inspected.
Then a light flickered on the panel, and Lampert reset one of the knobs, and almost immediately
a cord of light gray limestone was produced.
Apparently the same stuff as the cliffs, said Lampert, after examining the specimen.
Do you want to go any deeper or drill a few more holes to get an idea of the contour?
How fast will that thing go through limestone?
A couple of centimeters per minute.
It's too small to pack a real power unit.
Give it five minutes just to make sure it isn't a building block.
Ten centimeters wouldn't give you a whole building block.
A sample from that far inside one would tell me what I want to know.
You rock chippers don't seem to think that archaeology.
is a science yet.
Let me have that first core, too.
Mitsuizzi looked confident to the point of being cocky,
and Lampert let the mold burrow on.
The second core came in due time,
and the little man set merrily to work with tiny chips
from the two stone cylinders,
a pinch of the lowest soil sample which had been acquired,
a small comparison microscope,
and a kit of tiny reagent bottles.
Lampert used the time the tests consumed in reversing the mole and resetting the equipment on a new spot.
By the time the little mechanism had gnawed its way once more to rock, Mitsouizi was forced to admit
that the formation appeared to be natural.
He did not seem disheartened by the discoveries might have been expected.
He simply waited for more cores, his narrow face reflecting nothing but the utter absorption
Lampert knew he experienced whenever a problem arose in his line.
In spite of his apparent tendency to jump to conclusions,
Takehiko Mitsuizi was an experienced and respected member of his profession.
Lampert knew enough about his record to be perfectly willing to accept his instructions for the present.
A series of holes was drilled from the original position toward one of the streets,
40 yards away from it.
After each, the archaeologist admitted with perfect cheerfulness that there was nothing
inconsistent with the idea that the hill was a perfectly natural formation.
He still insisted, however, that the regular lines of trees, reinforced as they were
by the undergrowth pattern, required explanation.
Lampert admitted this, but felt that he knew what the explanation would be.
After all, volcanic residue is more than likely to contain trace elements of
Regitation requires even on veridus.
Finally the time came to get verification or the opposite.
The flamethrower had to be used this time, and for several minutes clouds of steam swirled
about them in as its blue-white tongue fought the sappy rain-soaked undergrowth.
Then the mole and its controls were wheeled into place, and the little robot once more
nosed its way out of sight.
I don't suppose you want any samples above the regular rock level, do you?
asked Lembert as the machine disappeared.
I think it would be best if we took them as usual, was the reply.
For one thing, we should try to learn the depth at which the soil composition changes.
We are at least agreed that it changes in some manner after all.
True enough, the geophysicists set his controls and the process continued.
A process familiar now to McLaugh.
as well as the scientists, for the guide had caught numerous glimpses of what was going on
while he prowled about the work area on self-imposed guard duty.
Mitsouizi took the crumbly soil course as they came, examined them quickly, they were arriving
every few seconds, and filed them in numbered compartments in a specimen case he had opened.
Detailed stratigraphy would come later.
For some time there was no gross evidence of a change in the soil, not in fact.
until his first case had been filled.
Can you stop that thing for a moment, Rob?
He asked at this point.
I don't want the loose track of these,
and we'll have to hold up while I open a new case.
All right, I thought you'd want to stop for thought soon anyway.
Why?
Because the mold is nearly four meters down,
well below the depth at which we hit bedrock before,
and is still in soil.
Eh?
But it's still ordinary soil,
of your volcanic ash.
Tuff had been eroded out of a lot of the joints in the cliffs.
There's no reason to expect it to be at the same level as the surrounding rock.
That's true, Mitsouizi paused in thought for a moment.
If we keep on going straight down, we may just be working into a natural crack, as you say.
Might it not be better to drill several holes within a few square yards here
to determine whether it's a narrow joint, such as you expect, or an actual edge to the rock at this
level?
Maybe the edge of a roof, eh?
Lampert chuckled, but spoke in a manner which could give no offense.
I can do better than that.
Don't need to pull up and start over, simply drill horizontally from where we are now.
Shouldn't take long to get dimensions if that's all you want.
He halted the robot momentarily, and from a compartment in the drum remove something like a
small theodolite mounting. This he sat on a short tripod, over the point where the neck of
the mold emerged from the ground, and set a pointer at right angles to the line of tall trees.
Then he started digging again.
End of Part 4. Part 5 of the Green World by Hal Clement.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 5.
4 starts in as many days.
different directions and twenty minutes of time showed fairly conclusively that the line of vegetation
which had given rise to the street theory was growing along a straight crack, apparently
a fairly ordinary joint in the limestone. While several more holes would have to be drilled
to prove it, even Mitsouizi was willing to admit that in all probability the remaining lines
would be found to be over similar cracks. You must admit, though, that the regularity of this
joint pattern is pretty unusual, the archaeologist said at length.
It's far from being unknown, Lampert replied.
I got my first large taste of it in my student days back on earth.
Fly over the mesa country in southwestern North America sometime.
Most of the joints there are invisible from a distance, of course, but at the edge of a
but where weathering is most prominent the blocks have frequently started to separate,
and the thing looks as though it had been put together from outsized bricks.
"'Hen.
"'Sem to remember something of the sort myself, now that you mention it.
"'I did some digging in that area, too.
"'I shouldn't have connected that sort of country with what we have here, though.'
"'Different meat, same skeleton,' replied Lampert.
"'But how about this volcanic ash or mud or whatever it is,
"'which at least fills the joints we saw in the cliff?
"'That's not so usual, is it?'
not in my experience but granting the joints and the volcanoes there's nothing really surprising about it incidentally we don't know that this crack we're standing on has the same filling we'd better bore down again to make sure
At least we may get some idea of the date of the volcanic action compared to that of the
orogyny that tilted the block where we're camped.
If there's tough down there, too, it will substantiate the idea that the volcanism is the
older.
Why?
Couldn't Ash have settled down here as well as up there at substantially the same time?
It could.
But I'd bet a fairly respectable sum that the tough we saw in the canyon was from a mudflow,
not a fall of airborne ash.
That could hardly have reached the top of the cliffs,
actually the opposite slope of the mountains,
where Sulaweo is working, and this area simultaneously.
Maybe from different eruptions.
I get the impression that this world has a slight tendency
to produce volcanic fields rather than individual cones or flows.
Might be.
Chemistry will probably settle that question.
During the latter part of this discussion, Lampert had directed the mole once more downwards,
and every half-meter of travel another core was added to the collection.
At six and a half meters below the soil, the first solid specimen arrived.
The others had been held together only by roots.
This one, however, caused the two scientists to look at each other.
Lampert nodded slowly with a smile.
Mitsui Tsewitsi gave a shrug and let the expression of resignation play over his usually impassive features.
The core was tough, apparently identical with that in the cliffs to the east.
It even contained fossils.
I guess this whole dig might as well be taken over by the paleontology department, Lampert commented finally.
I suppose they'll at least want to compare fossils into tilted and level strata.
I suppose so.
Mitsuisi was turning the little cylinder over and over in his hand.
Tell me, Rob, what's this little speck of green?
Copper salts of one sort or another, I suppose.
Lampert was not greatly interested.
A lot of secondary minerals form in and under volcanic detritus.
On this world, carbonates like malachite should form quite readily.
Why should it form enough?
a regular thread like this.
You mean a vein?
Hard to tell, precisely.
Varying rates of water seepage, varying degrees of oxygen or carbon dioxide penetration,
varying degrees of compactness in the rock where the stuff is formed.
I don't mean a vein.
This is in a cylindrical body going right through the core from one side to the other,
as though there had been a copper wire there originally which had been attacked by soil
acids. Let's see. You're right. It's hardly an ordinary vein, though your suggestion seems a
trifle forfecht. The paleontologists can probably furnish an idea. Maybe a vine or even a worm
buried in the mud flow acted as the precipitating agent for copper salts in the subsequent
seepage. I've seen beautiful fossils of pyrite, which had been formed that way. But this shows no trace
of structure except for its exterior shape.
Isn't a really well-preserved structure the exception rather than the rule in fossils?
I suppose so still I'd like to know just how far and which way this green thread goes.
I'd also like to know whether there are dilute copper deposits spread through this rock,
which could be concentrated in the way you suggest.
The first could be learned by taking enough cores.
The other would call for some very careful analysis of samples which had been selected with a very
sedulous eye kept on the stratigraphy.
You know that.
You must have done that sort of thing looking for carbon-14 samples at times.
Yes, I see that.
Could you make such analyses here?
No, except for the mere presence of copper.
The cores would have to go back to a well-equipped lab.
Still, if you want to get them, it's all right with me.
Problems were made to be solved.
I'll admit this one doesn't seem very exciting to me, but I can use your data after you finish
for work of my own.
You should wind up with material for a pretty complete geochemical picture of this neighborhood.
Shall I get the course for you?
Yes, please.
Silly question.
All right.
The mole was drawn up a short distance and went questing downward once more at an angle
to the original shaft, branching.
off a short distance above the level from which the copper deposit had come.
Again and again the process was repeated, each time in a slightly different bearing from the
central hole, and Mitsouizi examined each core for traces of green.
At last he found it, piercing the little cylinder of rock as the other had done, and then,
at his suggestion, Lampert reset the mold to get a sample in the opposite direction from the one
which had furnished the new specimen.
this also checked positive and four more samples taken along the same line at various distances all did the same apparently the line of green extended for some distance about parallel both to the surface of the ground and the trend of the joint in which it was buried
Mitsuii was radiant.
I'm going down to that level if I have to come back with an expedition of my own.
If that's a fossil worm, it's worth getting the whole length anyway.
But I don't believe it is.
I—that will take a lot of time, you know, Lampert pointed out mildly.
Certainly I know.
Even if I use your fast excavator down to the tough level, I'll have to do detail work from then on.
What of it?
Well, the others may have jobs they want to do.
Then they can do them.
What are we here for, anyway?
I thought it was to investigate the past of this planet.
And Dami and Huns are doing that their own way right now.
Why can't I?
I'm an archaeologist, and I came along to do any archaeological work that presented itself
to do.
This is the only thing of the sort anyone's seen so for.
I know what you're thinking.
Maybe you're partly right. I certainly won't bet any money that this thread of green is a fossil
telephone wire, but it's as likely to be that as anything else you've suggested. And I'm going
down to that level and sift the whole volume. Hans and Endami can have any fossils I find if that
will make you happier. And if one of them says he has no use for fossils he didn't dig himself,
I'll make him eat his words. I can identify, locate, and report.
on anything that turns up in a rock as well as any of those jigsaw puzzle people.
And I can do it in mud, too, which is more than any of them could manage.
Don't get hot under the collar, if you can help it on this planet.
You sound as though one of the boys had been given you a lecture on the importance of knowing
what Strata a given series of specimens represent.
Not one of our boys.
They have a little more sense.
But there was a young paleontologist when I was covering the anterior.
worries whorls, whose memory still makes my blood pressure go up.
Never mind me.
That's not important, but I want to make this dig."
It will tie up machines, however freely we can spare time," Lampert said slowly.
I'll tell you, how about this?
We spend the rest of the day getting cores from other points along these cracks.
For one thing we ought to know more about the structure of the hill, and for another we might
find more of your wires. After all, the chance of our hitting the only one around is pretty
remote. I can't quite see a single dropped piece of copper wire showing up in the first
two days of a project like this. I neither said nor implied that this should be the only piece.
I don't doubt for a moment that there are others, whether they are wires or worms.
Sorry. Well, we take these cores back to camp this evening, together with Indy.
others we find of the same sort, and let Hans and Endami look them over.
If they don't turn out to be something that the boys recognize and can classify right off the bat,
we come back tomorrow with all the digging machinery you want, and dig until you either find
all you want, satisfy yourself that there's nothing here, or find something which obviously
requires more specialized attention than we can give it. All right, nothing could be fairer.
Let's go.
The discussion in camp that evening was animated beyond anything the guide had heard.
His original estimate of these men as relatively quiet specimens underwent a sharp revision.
Mitsuisi's report of the day's activity at his sight had, it is true, been delivered quite calmly,
but from then on, matters grew progressively livelier.
This was not caused by opposition to the archaeologist's plans.
The others were all in favor of remaining for their own reasons.
However, the question of just what was likely to be found gave rise to much rather barbed comment on Sulawayo's part.
I don't see how you can expect to find any trace of civilized work here, he said flatly at one point.
The animal and plant life on this planet is at a stage of evolution corresponding to something like Earth's Pennsylvania age,
when the amphibians were the highest known forms of life.
I'm not saying that there couldn't be such a thing as an intelligent amphibian,
but I do say that the normal set of evolutionary forces which,
on both earth and veritas, produced creatures of the amphibian pattern,
could have done that, or produced an intelligent fish, not both.
If the latter ever evolved, it failed.
For the amphibians, pardon me, amphibids,
are here. To get an intelligent amphibed on this world will, or would if the sun was to last
long enough, require another orogenic period with the accompanying climatic changes. Then you'd
stand a considerably higher chance of getting reptiles instead if the comparative work done
on over 400 planets carries any meaning. I don't doubt the value of the work at all. You are
very probably correct. It did not occur to me to expect remains of intelligent amphibians.
I saw no reason to presuppose that anything in the way of artifacts which I might find would
necessarily be native to this planet. You think there were other visitors from outside the
Beta Libre system? The possibility certainly exists. Here we are. But for Pete's sake,
Do you really expect that they stayed long enough to build a city?
Or do you think you have the remains of a camp like ours, or what?
I don't think anything.
It has been suggested that such people did come and stay long enough to, and you think you found them?
I think nothing except that I found, with Rob's help, something which neither his professional
knowledge nor mine, nor even yours, is able to explain, and I think an explanation is desirable.
I hope you won't consider me discourteous for pointing out that each time you have tried to accuse me
of jumping to conclusions, you have been able to do so only by jumping to some yourself.
I might further add that the suggestion that this planet had been stocked with its present
supply of life-types by visitors from space was advanced.
by a paleontologist, not by one of my colleagues.
I gather he could not understand how life could evolve to the state it shows in the 30-odd million
years that the planet seems to have been solid.
I neither support nor deride the idea.
I simply want to gather data in an attempt to explain a much simpler question.
Why are narrow threads of copper compounds to be found?
every few feet in the volcanic tuff, filling the joints in a certain limestone hill.
And why are those threads always nearly horizontal?
You and Hans say they are not organic fossils, and I accept your conclusion.
Rob says that there is no copper in that rock detectable with his equipment, except within
a few millimeters of the green threads.
I say nothing, except that I have never seen such a thing before.
Under the circumstances I fail to understand where you get the idea that I think there is a city
built by the people who stocked this world 30 million years ago buried under that hill.
I know I said city when I first saw it, and I still think I was justified in the opinion.
I have now seen evidence which causes me to admit that the vegetation pattern was not
caused by artificial structures, and I dismissed the original hypothesis.
I still want to dig there, and in accordance with Rob's agreement I am going to dig there,
with the assistance of anyone who chooses to help.
I know you want to go back to your set of leg bones in the cliff,
and have no objection to your doing so.
Even I can see the importance and even the nature of your work.
Why can't you do the same for mine?
The little man was leaning forward and staring intensely into Sulawayo's face,
by the time he finished this harang, and Endami once more felt a trifle ashamed of himself.
Lampert, however, saved him the need for formulating an apology.
I'm sure Indami didn't mean to ridicule your work in any way.
Take, he said.
We all realize perfectly that an underground phenomena which cannot be explained at sight either
by geology, paleontology, or archaeology, is something which requires investigation.
I imagine that the best plan will be for string and me to go with you tomorrow while the
others continue their stone-cutting.
Hans, just how far along are you, anyway?
The older paleontologist thought for a moment,
"'We really don't know,' he said at last.
Of course, we aren't trying to get the individual bones completely free of the matrix.
That will take somebody months or years.
We're uncovering just enough to determine the extent of the specimen,
so we can take it all out in one big block, or more, of course, if it's too big.
So far we can only guess at how big it is.
We've uncovered with certainty two feet, and gone about half a meter along one of the attached
legs.
They seem to be extending straight back into the cliff, so in effect we're cutting a tunnel
beside the thing.
Assuming it had two main leg sections, as most of the present animals on both Earth and Veritas
appear to have, we're about halfway between knee and hip joint. Of course, it might turn out to be
the veridian equivalent of a horse or chicken. In that case, we're about halfway between ankle and
knee. We certainly have several feet yet to penetrate before we can outline the whole block,
assuming that the specimen is essentially complete. Several days, I would guess. Can you use any sort
of power apparatus for any of your cuts?
I don't like to on general principles, but, yes, we could, with actually very little risk.
If you have some sort of rock saw whose cutting part can get fine control, I'd be willing to use
it for parts of the tunnel away from the actual specimen.
I have. We'll take you up there first thing in the morning, and I'll go down with you
and show you how to use it before going on with take and string.
Who holds the copter in place while you climb down the ladder, give your lesson.
and then come back," asked the guide.
"'Huh, I forgot about that.
All right.
I'll break out the machinery and give the lesson right now.'
He got up and strode to the helicopter.
McLaughlin covered him from the fence to the aircraft, but nothing dangerous appeared.
The geophysicist disappeared inside and returned a moment later with a compact metal case
under his arm.
The guide holstered his weapon as the gate in the fence closed once more.
Actually, the Felodon was miles downstream.
It has spent the day in its chosen lair, apparently indifferent to the doings of the men a few hundred
yards away.
With the coming of darkness, real darkness this time, for the rain-clouds cut off both the
moonlight and the night glow from the upper atmosphere, it had emerged, hunted, killed, and fed,
as before, apparently unhampered by the lack of light.
By midnight, it was back in the same.
same layer, poach distended, as close to sleep as its cold-blooded kind ever came.
End of Part 5. Part 6 of the Green World by Hal Clement. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Part 6
The rain was still falling when the clouds lightened once more to the rising sun.
Lampert was getting used to navigating the canyon by radar, and, and, and, and, the clouds, and,
and was an excellent pilot anyway, so he did not have too much trouble in locating the shelf
where Suluweo and Crendall had been working.
Getting the men down to it was not particularly difficult, though rather nerve-wracking.
Crendle went first, unburdened except for his personal equipment.
Then he studied the ladder for Sulaweo, who had the cutter strapped across his shoulders.
The studying hand was needed.
climbing down a rope ladder when loaded top-heavy can be an extremely awkward bit of activity.
Had the pilot above been less capable, it would probably have been impossible.
The ledge was wet, but fortunately not very slippery.
The men set their equipment on the ground at the point where their cut entered the crack in the cliff,
and without delay set to work.
The tunnel was deep enough now to shelter the one actually cutting from the rain,
so at first they took turns at this operation.
The cutting machine Lampert had provided
was a sort of diamond-tooth chainsaw
capable of a two-meter extension.
Ordinarily it was not the sort of thing
a paleontologist would consider using so close to a specimen,
but the men were fairly sure by now
of the general extent of the thing they were uncovering.
Even so, they used the saw
only on the side of their tunnel away from the visible remains.
They speedily widened the passage enough to permit them both to get inside and work on the face
of the exposed material, but they still used hand tools whenever there was any suspicion
that a bone might be about to appear.
Work proceeded several times as fast as it had the day before.
They tried cutting another tunnel on the opposite side of the fossil, but this proved rather
awkward.
The creature was close to this side of the crack, and they had to be able to the crack, and they had to
to cut limestone as well as the softer tough. The saw proved capable of handling this,
it would have handled granite without trouble, but went a little more slowly. Eventually, however,
the two men were working on opposite sides of the fossil, each in a tunnel extending some
two meters into the cliff face. Half a day's work uncovered the leg bone sufficiently to show
that Crendel's first idea had been right. There were only the two major george
joints, each eight trifles shorter than the corresponding parts of the human skeleton.
The lower leg was single rather than double, however.
Knee and ankle both consisted of ball and socket joints.
And with this fact determined, the men paused for thought.
Now, why, mused Crendel aloud, should any sort of creature need that articulation?
Could that foot be a hand instead? asked Sulueo.
Of course, questions like that.
That should have awaited the results of detailed examination in a laboratory.
Equally, of course, the two men proceeded to clear one of the feet a little more thoroughly
in order to find out for themselves.
The answer was not helpful, though.
He might have picked up a twig with it, but he couldn't have held it any more tightly than I can in my toes,
was Crendel's verdict.
It's a bigger, flatter foot than ours, but it's a foot.
Nothing more.
Maybe a swimming organ on the side, suggested Sulileo cautiously.
Seems doubtful.
If that joint evolved for such a purpose, I should think there'd be a corresponding modification in the footbones, too.
Say a flattening such as you see in the paddles of some of the Mesozoic sea reptiles of Earth.
Reasonable.
But not necessarily right.
That I admit.
Anything else strike you?
Yes, though it makes the joints still more unbelievable.
What?
The foot itself!
Unless some rather remarkable distortion has occurred,
it had both longitudinal and transverse arches like yours and mine,
which suggests strongly that this thing's ancestors had been walking erect on two legs
for some hundreds of thousands of generations.
Crendle raised his eyebrows at this, and silently,
examined the bony structure before them for several minutes.
I hadn't spotted that, he said slowly.
He looked in silence for several more seconds.
Then the two men moved by a single thought, went to the other end of the exposed leg,
and began to clear the hip joint and pelvic region.
They worked almost in silence, understanding each other perfectly,
like an experienced surgical team and gradually.
The equivalent of a pelvic girdle and lower end of a spinal column were cleared sufficiently
to show their general nature.
It was at this point that the helicopter returned, but neither man noticed the fact, until
McLaughlin had called several times from the open ladder hatch.
They climbed silently and thoughtfully up to the flyer, but Mitsouizi's first question
started the talk flowing.
It did not end for a long, long time.
with difficulty held interruptions of his more volatile companion there can be only the slightest doubt that this thing we're uncovering walked erect on two legs he reported
the feet the way the pelvis is modified to support internal organs the fusing of the lower vertebrae with the pelvic girdle to form a weight-carrying foundation they all point the same way
The only thing hard to understand is the knee and ankle joints.
If we had them, it would be virtually impossible for us to hold our legs rigid.
Perhaps some really remarkable musculature, or a cortilage structure which has not been preserved, cut in Sulawayo.
Or some such thing as that would explain it.
I don't know.
The creature is good for several Ph.D. theses, just as it lies,
and probably an equal number of nervous collapses when we get it out.
I find myself strongly desirous of seeing a skull, remarked Lampert.
Sulueo glanced at him sharply.
You too? asked the young paleontologist.
I was hoping I was only one crazy enough to have thought of that.
Mitsui Tzi smiled openly, an almost unheard-of act for him.
He said nothing for a moment, but everyone saw him, and even McLaughlin understood the thought.
After a sufficiently long pause, he asked a question.
Have you uncovered enough of this creature's structure to guess at any evolutionary connection,
or lack of it, with the amphibids we already know on this world?
I'd hate to take any oaths, replied Crendel.
The legs, which we've seen most of, are different in detail,
but they at least correspond in general with what we find here.
The only really significant point there would be.
be the single shinbone. In that it resembles veridian land-life in general. These animals don't
have the separate tibia and fibula characteristic of the usual run of earthly land vertebrates.
It really proves nothing about what we're all thinking, of course.
I am tempted to work with you gentlemen tomorrow, muttered the archaeologist.
Why, didn't your investigation pan out? It's harder for me to say than for you so far.
To dig a pit, big enough not only to work in, but to cover a useful amount of ground,
and a driving rain is quite a job even with Rob's machines, which I would never use,
were I not sure that there is nothing of importance above the limestone level.
I have gotten down to the rock over an area three-meter-square, which is very good going,
but I shall undoubtedly find the pit full of water to-morrow, as we have not yet improvised
a really satisfactory drainage system.
I cannot, or at least will not, use machines inside the crack in the limestone, so it will
be some time before I get down to our mysterious green threads.
Then it would seem that the best we can do is to go on as we have, said Lampert.
The only change might be if one more man were to help at takes dig.
But I don't suppose either Hans or Endami would care to leave his own job at the
moment. And actually there's not much more to do with the hill which can be done by anyone but
take himself. I'll continue to help him as long as it's a question of moving mud, but after
that he'll have to do his own sifting. String is automatically on guard duty at the hill,
so there's not much change we can make. Though I must say I haven't seen anything dangerous
yet in that jungle. Those animals are like crows, remarked the guide.
We used to have them on the farm back on earth.
They'd be all over a freshly planted field while no one was around.
Come out yelling.
They don't move.
Come out with a gun, and they're gone.
Unless you'd happen to forget to load it.
Then they sat and laughed at you.
If you're suggesting, Doctor, that I should relax the guard duty and lend a hand with digging,
I veto the idea, and not because I'm afraid of getting my hands dirty.
I won't say I didn't have some such thought, but I accept your ruling," smiled Lampert.
There was silence for a moment.
Then Crendel reverted to the earlier subject.
You know, he said, if that thing we've found does turn out to have been intelligent,
it will hardly solve any of the existing problems about Veritas.
Why not? asked Sulawayo in some surprise.
We still won't know whether it's native to the planet or not.
unless we can establish a relatively complete evolutionary sequence leading to this form.
If we do that, the question of speed of evolution here gets worse than ever.
If we don't, no one will be sure whether or not we ought to look for buried spaceports
or send out expeditions to find the planet they might have come from.
The latter would be something of a waste of time, remarked McClockland.
Haunting one planet in the galaxy is like hunting one log of wood.
wood on Veritas. No one contradicted this. All had seen the galactic star clouds from outside
planetary atmosphere. It seems to me, speaking as an amateur in your fields, gentlemen, said Mitsuitz,
that the mere discovery of an intelligent creature in the Veridian fossil deposits would, on the
basis of our present knowledge of the mechanisms of evolution, strongly support the idea that this
world was stocked from others.
I realize that our knowledge may not be sufficient to justify us in that conclusion,
but it is certainly not great enough to justify any other.
You seem to have something there, take, admitted Crendel.
If this thing does turn out to have room for a brain in its skull,
I suppose the next ten conventions of the interstellar archaeological society,
or whatever you call it, we'll be meeting at Emerald.
I shouldn't be at all surprised.
So far my profession and yours have not overlapped,
due to a considerable factor of difference in the time spans covered.
But it is just possible that we would be holding joint meetings in the event you describe.
This meeting is changing from discussion to speculation, Lampert said dryly.
I would be the last to decry the value of imagination.
But actually we are as likely.
to face the need for entirely new hypotheses as a result of our work here as to find support
for any now in existence.
I can speculate with the best of you, but for goodness sake let's not take any speculation
too seriously.
I don't really believe that some big-headed descendants of Endami's fossil are listening in
on me right now.
Even Sulawayo admitted that this was rather unlikely, and the conversation turned to other
matters until darkness fell.
No one had trouble sleeping.
The loud drumming of the rain on the metal roof
meant nothing to feel workers with their experience.
If anything, the sound was soothing,
giving a perpetual reminder that there was a roof.
Such protection is not always available in that line of work.
The Felodon seemed to have lost its traveling propensity.
Once more it went out into the utter darkness
solely to get a meal. It accomplished that as quickly as ever, though its eyes must have been
useless, and the hiss and rumble of falling water drowned and buried any sounds which would
have been useful in tracking. Back in the same layer, full-fed, it drowsed once more.
End of Part 6. Part 7 of the Green World by Hal Clement. This Libre-Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 7 Mitsuisi had been almost right in his prediction that the pit would be full of water.
Only the fact that the land sloped a trifle, they were not right on top of the little hill,
had saved it. As it was, several feet of water were in the bottom,
and a good deal of mud had washed in from the two sides facing the edges of the crack.
The other two, much better based by deep-reaching roots, had held firm.
After some thought, Lampert used the little robot again.
He started it at the bottom of the pit on the downhill side and drove almost horizontally toward the river.
The 200 meters of neck permitted the mole to emerge from the slope further down.
When it was withdrawn, a small drainhole was obtained.
Several more of these were drilled and the pit lost its water fairly rapidly.
There was still the problem of getting into the crack.
itself, which of course would involve digging below the level of the drain-holes.
Lampert, using the same excavator which had made the pit itself, finally provided a fair
solution by digging a set of ditches around the larger hole, and since the opening itself
was quite well protected by overhanging trees, Mitsouizi had only drainage from the surrounding
soil to contend with.
Two hours after arriving, therefore, he had a relatively clear working space.
The bottom of the pit was limestone, exposed by the complete removal of the overlying soil
some three meters square.
Across it ran the crack, a trifle less than a meter wide, still packed with dirt.
Everything was muddy, limestone, projecting roots and Mitsuizzi himself.
A slender log with branches cut to ten centimeter stubs leaned against one corner, forming a rough ladder
and giving entrance in egress to and from the site.
The machinery which had done the original digging was at one side.
Mitsouizi did not expect to need it again.
He was now equipped with a hand-shovel and seemed about to use it.
Lampert, standing at the edge of the pit, felt the incongruity, but managed not to laugh.
"'Are you sure there's nothing I can do down there with you?' he asked.
"'I'm afraid not.
From now on I want every bit of dirt to pass under my own eyes.
Are you going to try to throw it all up here as you finish?
No, that's the purpose of the extra pit area down here.
I can get a long way down the joint, simply heaping the material on the rock.
It's damp enough to pile quite steeply, too.
How far down do you think you can get?
The cracks rather narrow to work in, and you have three and a half meters to go before you hit tough.
That's going to be rough shoveling.
I still think you could use a machine safely for a little way further at least.
No doubt I could, but I'm not going to.
There's one thing I might use, though.
If you have another of those saws, such as the bone men are using up on the cliff,
I could widen this crack as I go, cut steps, in fact, to get the mud up to this level
when I'm further down.
That's a good thought, but I don't have any other.
If you really get far enough down to need it, though, I could fly up to get it.
They were going to shift over to hand labor anyway.
All right.
Of course it will be some time before I get that deep anyway.
Maybe I won't need it today.
He bent to his work.
But what do I do? asked Lambert.
I can't go off to attend to my own projects because String has to stay here to guard you.
I can't get to the site where they're not.
the others are working because I can't land there. I can't sit in the helicopter and twiddle my
thumbs because I'll go crazy before the day is over." Mitzouitzis straightened once more and thought
briefly. "'Is there nothing in the geophysical line you could do with the inside of this pit?'
he asked finally. "'The saw and digging machine are not the only apparatus you brought. That's true.
I brought some seismic gear, though I didn't plan to use it quite like this.'
I might map the formations under this hill.
The information will be usable, I should think, and the joints will give quite a calibrating job.
It will keep me busy, anyway.
Just a minute, Missouisi looked a trifle perturbed.
Does that mean you're going to set off explosives around here?
I want the sides of this pit held together by something better than roots if you do.
Lamper chuckled.
No explosives, he said.
this is a nice little gadget with a robot like the core sampler.
It puts out waves of any type desired from any depth down to 250 meters,
a sort of subterranean sonar.
You'll never know it's working.
The wave amplitude isn't enough to feel.
He turned toward the helicopter on the riverbank below
and was starting to walk toward it when McLaughlin interrupted.
The guide had heard the conversation and his question was
purely rhetorical.
"'You weren't planning to walk down to the flyer alone, were you, Doctor?'
"'Well, yes, as a matter of fact.
After all, I won't be working.
I can keep my eyes open as I go.
You can see me for the greater part of the journey from here, too.'
Rather, to his surprise, the guide approved this argument, after a moment's thought.
"'All right, but please keep your gun in your hand as well as your head on a swivel.
I'd prefer to have Dr. Mitsuisi come down with us so we could stay together, but I know how he'd react
to the interruption, and I realize you're not a kid.
Just be careful.
Lampert promised, and the guide's manner had impressed him to the point where he was almost
afraid to make their return journey after reaching the flyer and packing his new equipment.
He was rather surprised to get back to the site without being attacked, and McLaughlin's
very evident relief of seeing him did nothing to ease his feelings. He began to set up the machinery.
This consisted of an assembly very similar to the drilling mole, a small delving robot, drawing a slender
tail behind it, the tail wound on a drum which surrounded the control unit. A dozen smaller
cylinders reposed in attached clips. The attached borer, Lampert explained to the guide,
goes down to any depth I set up to 250 meters.
It can produce any of the three normal types of earthquake wave, singly or in any combination,
with sufficient intensity to be detected at a range of over two kilometers in reasonably
well-conducting rock.
The small cylinders are detectors equipped not only to receive and analyze the wave coming
through the ground, but to measure electrically their location with respect to each other
and the main station.
I can use as many of them as I please up to the full dozen,
but they can be planted only a little way below the surface.
There exists the equipment for getting readings at depths comparable to that of the transmitter,
but I don't have it.
As it stands, by spotting receivers carefully,
I can get a pretty good picture of the formations for a radius of a kilometer,
and a depth even greater with ten minutes measuring and ten hours computing.
"'How far out do you plan to place these receivers?' the guide asked politely.
"'Well, I hadn't made a detail plan of that. I'd rather like to have them in radiating lines of
three, the lines spreading about fifteen degrees, and the individual cylinders about two hundred
meters apart. And just how were you going to place them? I gather that someone has to walk the best
part of four kilometers, or do these things fly in addition to their other abilities?"
Uh, someone walks.
I thought, perhaps, since you don't like the idea of my going alone through the jungle,
that I might stand guard overtake in the pit while you set them out.
Hmm.
The guide did not explode to Lamprich Relief.
It had not occurred to the scientist that the job of wandering around a hole in the ground
waiting for animals which never came might get a little boring to a man of McLaughlin's background.
Let's go over first and see how Dr. Mitsweetsi is getting along. I guess you could stand over him
with a gun for half an hour. Of course, the cover runs dangerously close to the pit. Maybe we'd
better burn it off to a safer distance. Still, I guess that won't be necessary. You can stand
out here where it's relatively clear, and see all the approaches to the pit.
Something might jump in without your having time to hit it, and you'd at least see it and get
there fast enough to do any shooting necessary."
They approached the hole and looked in.
Mitsuii was working busily.
A fair quantity of earth lay spread on the rock, and some two-thirds of the length of the crack
had been excavated to a depth of perhaps a quarter of a meter.
The geophysicist attracted the little man's attention and told him of the plan.
Mitsouizi nodded and bent once more to his work.
The phelodon was becoming restless.
It could hardly be hungry as yet, but it was on its feet, snarling silently as it had when
the helicopter first entered its kin.
For perhaps a minute it stood there, then with the same air of the termination it had shown days
before, and scores of kilometers away, it began to thread its way through the underbrush
toward the river and the digging site.
"'I'll stand where you suggested and never take my eyes off the pit,' Lampert promised.
"'Then I'll come back to find you missing,' replied the guide.
"'You're guarding yourself, too. Remember, don't keep your eyes on anything. Keep them moving.'
He finished distributing the little cylinder.
in the various pockets of his outer clothing, and moved off in the direction Lampert had
indicated.
He looked back frequently, but each time saw the scientist alert.
When the underbrush finally cut off the view, he refused to worry too much.
Actually, McLaughlin had gone to considerable pains to make the jungles of Veritas sound
more dangerous than they really are.
His conscious motive was to make the inexperienced members of the party,
alert enough for their own safety.
It was quite true that a man could be killed in quite a variety of ways in those rainforests.
There was a distinct possibility, however, that he also wanted to impress them with the
importance of his surfaces.
He did not, therefore, suffer much from anxiety during his walk, though, on the other hand,
he wasted no time.
He had, of course, only a rough idea of the distance he had traveled, though he was able to
keep his direction with a small impulse compass tuned to the seismic apparatus and forming part
of its regular equipment.
He dropped three of the cylinders at the required intervals as nearly as he could guess, forcing
them each a little way into the ground, as Lampert had shown him.
Then he turned at right angles, walked what he hoped was the right distance, and started back
toward the site, planting equipment as he went.
again, in again, and the last of the dozen tubes was in the ground.
Mitsuisi's shovel scraped deeper.
Lampert, glancing up and around every few seconds, made minute adjustments to the controls of
his seismic apparatus.
Its little mole robot had started on its downward trip.
The Felodon lurked thirty yards from the point where Lampert was standing, protected from
his sight by the undergrowth, and by one of the piles of dirt thrown up by the man.
machine which had dug the pit. It seemed to be looking through the soil at the spot where the
man was. The snarl was still on its face, but no muscle moved in its long body. It had been
there for minutes without moving. It had frozen similarly when McLaughlin had passed it on his
way out. Now it simply stood and waited. On a cliffside kilometers away, and Dami Sulueo
gave utterance to the first profanity Crenel had ever heard him use.
They were on opposite sides of the block containing the fossil, so neither could see the other.
Crendle naturally asked what was wrong.
Don't tell me a bug got through one of these suits.
Worse, if possible.
I told you this foreleg, both had been carefully avoiding the use of such words as arms,
was sticking out sideways so that I was afraid we might have cut off part of it,
in digging the tunnel.
Crendel nodded.
I remember, did we?
I don't know.
A? How come?
I should think that'd be no doubt one way or the other.
If you have that much of the limb clear.
Well, I haven't.
I got as far as the bone goes, and right there I run out of tough and into the limestone.
If there's anything more, it's an entirely different kind of rock, which is a trifle unlikely.
but I'm going to have to check the blocks we cut from this part of the tunnel in order to make sure,
and I don't look forward to the job at all.
Crendel, properly sympathetic, came around to Sulawayo's side to look, and agreed that the search was necessary.
The bone, the younger man, had been clearing, ended in a joint of the type they had come to regard
as typical of the creature's limbs, and this had occurred almost exactly at the surface they had
left when first outlining the block with the saw.
Suluea, with a grunt of disgust, dropped his tools and went out into the rain, where the blocks
cut from the cliff had been piled.
Crindel, nobly sacrificing his personal inclinations, went along with him.
The search lasted for a long time.
For a long time, in fact, after it became evident that it was going to be useless, for the
The chance of a perfect specimen is not easily thrown away.
Finally, however, Crenllost straightened up with a sigh.
I guess we'll have to be satisfied with a restoration on one side, he said wearily.
I hope someone fifty years from now doesn't find another and discover that it's a sort of
vertebrae fiddler crab with one fore limb ending in a paw or claw something like five times
the size of the one or the other.
Sulawayo gave a gloomy assent, and the two went back to work in their respective tunnels.
Lampert saw McLaughlin the instant the underbrush made it possible, a fact which the guide
later admitted was to the scientist's credit. He had, of course, been eagerly awaiting that
return, for the transmitter was down to its first set depth and awaiting only the word that all
receivers were in place. He called eagerly the moment the guide came within earshot.
"'Everything down?' McLaughlin nodded.
"'Everything down as nearly as I could tell, the way you said.
How long will the readings take?'
"'Only a few minutes.
I'll take a couple of calibration shots from ten, fifteen, and twenty meters' depth,
then one at fifty, a hundred and so on, down as far as the mold will go.
The shooting takes practically no time.
It's the drilling that will hold us up.'
"'What then?'
Well, Lampert smiled.
After that, the usual procedure is to pick up the receivers and place them in a similar pattern
in a new direction.
If the field crew doesn't go on strike, we take the whole circle about the transmitter.
I was afraid of that, grunted McClockland as he stopped by the machine.
Well, let's go.
The two men bent over the controls in a silence, broken only by the scraping of Mitsubi
see shovel a dozen meters away.
Lampert pressed his shot button, and a light on the panel flashed white momentarily.
Below their feet, unfelt, the pulse of sound energy raced outward, echoing from the walls
of deep striking joints, from the boundaries between rocks of differing densities or elastic
consonants, from the walls of caverns deep in the limestone.
Some tiny portion of the energy from time to time, encountering,
and affecting one of the tiny receivers McLaughlin had buried.
As each receiver gathered its bit of data, it retransmitted the information to the master
unit, and everything was recorded on a single sheet as the milliseconds sped by.
Long before a full second had passed, the first of the pulses had damped out as heat energy,
and enough had been transmitted for the machine to obtain an adequate averaging record.
The light blinked out again.
Lampert nodded in satisfaction and sent the mole downward once more.
Looks good.
Now the next set, he remarked.
As that pulse of seismic energy went forth,
the Felodon rose to its full height,
almost showing itself over the pile of dirt,
which was now its sole protection from the view of the men.
The snarl on its face seemed to grow fiercer,
if that were possible.
For just an instant it seemed torn by conflicting desires, but that was for just an instant.
Any tendency to flee was smothered before it could take full form.
There were two men now to worry about, and correspondingly, less chance for the opportunity
it had been awaiting.
But the opportunity came.
For just a moment the guide looked down at the panel which was absorbing Lampert's full
attention. In that moment, a green and lavender streak flowed over the heap of sorrel in a single
leap and vanished into the pit. It must have been timed and guided by the mysterious sense
McLaughlin had mentioned. It could see none of the men when it leaped. Yet it timed the act for the moment
none were looking and landed directly on Mitsubizi. The little archaeologist never knew what hit him.
without a sound, and the killer, as though nothing lived anywhere in the neighborhood, settled
down to its meal.
In this it must have been disappointed.
The chemicals in the clothing designed to repel veridian insects were equally obnoxious to the carnivore,
and it made no serious attempt to get through them.
However, not all of the body was protected in this way.
A second pulse went from the buried transmitter, and then a third pulse.
third, each from a point a few meters deeper than the last.
Lampert's attention, of course, was centered on his controls.
McClockland's eyes were once more sweeping restlessly over the surrounding landscape.
Both heard the sounds coming from the pit, but neither interpreted them as anything more
than the scraping of Mitsouizi's shovel.
Neither, of course, considered them consciously.
Their attention was finally attracted by something decidedly more noticed.
The phelodon did not, or could not, remain at its meal for more than a few moments.
Its apparent indifference to the other men changed once more to what seemed like an internal
struggle. An observer would have been sure up to now that it was using its peculiar sense to avoid
the sight of men with guns, but that hypothesis failed now.
as lampert started the mole robot downward once more the phelodon leaped out of the pit toward the two men regardless of the fact that mcclachlan was facing toward it end of part seven
part eight of the green world by hal clement this librivox recording is in the public domain part eight moccalan saw the fanged hat emerge and his reflexes took over
instantly. A streak of flame passed beside the leaping carnivore, exploding into a white-hot
blossom of blazing gas as it contacted the pile of dirt on the far side of the pit.
The guy ducked and rolled frantically sideward as another spring carried the creature toward him.
Claws raked the air past his shoulder, and he fired again before the roll was complete and without
any sort of aim.
and beasts alike were splattered with white-hot droplets of metal from the seismic recorder
as the second shot caught it squarely.
And this seemed to be enough for the carnivore.
Its next leap was away from the men instead of toward them.
A geyser of steam and mud erupted beside it as Lampert finally got his weapon into action,
and before the vapor had been beaten down once more by the rain, the animal was out of sight
behind the undergrowth.
Both men sent several shots in the direction of the crackling bushes, but accomplished nothing
except the felling of a tree or two and the starting of a bonfire which failed to make any headway against the rain.
Convinced that the Felodon had gone, the men ran to the pit.
Lampert did not even take time out to glance at the wreckage of his equipment.
There was just enough distance to cover to let each one realize that he had no idea how long the carnivore had been inside,
and what the scraping sound might have been.
Both slowed down as they approached the edge,
not relishing what they expected to see,
but this did not prove to be what they had expected.
McLaughlin's face, already grim,
turned gray as he saw that his first shot
had not merely missed the animal at which it was aimed.
The bolt had struck the pile of dirt
which had been left by the digging machinery
at the far lip of the pit
and scattered most of it to the four winds.
Perhaps half a ton it slid back into the hole from which it had originally been removed.
There was no telling from above what the phelodon had done to Mitsuizzi.
The upper half of the archaeologist's body was buried completely, and the rest so liberally
sprinkled with dirt that it was not at once identifiable.
The guide, using language strange even to the widely traveled Lampert,
Leap the three meters downward without bothering to use the ladder, seized a projecting leg,
and tried to draw the little man clear of the soil.
Lampert, equally aware of the possible value of time, but feeling that he would do little
good with a broken leg, made the descent in the normal manner.
By the time he reached the bottom, McLaughlin has succeeded in Dragon Mitsuezi almost completely
clear. Lampert started forward to clear the mud from the still hidden face, then he stopped,
and his stomach abruptly heaved as he realized that the face was not hidden. It was gone.
Mitsuici had removed the headgear and gloves from his protective suit for the normal reason
to see and manipulate better. The exposed head and hands had formed the Philodon's hasty meal.
The paleontologists saw the helicopter approaching this time, for they were working outside
the tunnel.
Between them on the ledge lay a block of stone some five feet long, too high and four wide,
over two tons of material, all told, which had been worked out of the hole rather ingeniously
by the men.
Partial undercuts had been made, rollers worked out of stone by the cutter placed underneath,
the undercutting completed along a plane which sloped slightly upward into the tunnel.
Of course, the block had run off the rollers once it was out in the open, and the men could
no more shift in another centimeter than they could return to Emerald without the helicopter,
but at least it was more or less accessible by air.
They were chipping waste rock from the corners when the flyer appeared.
So the wayo was first up the ladder, unburdened this time.
They expected to have further use for the cutter.
He noted that Lampert was alone in the machine and promptly asked the question the geophysicist had been dreading.
Where's take?
We found something for him.
I'm afraid he won't appreciate it.
He was killed a couple of hours ago by a Philodon.
The news silenced even Sulawayo, and the expression on his junior's face actually startled Crendle when he climbed.
through the hatch.
Endomi, what in—
Lampert cut in with the same news he had given a moment before.
Crendle reacted similarly, then slowly lowered himself into a seat.
He did not ask for details.
Both men could see that this was not the time to put such a question to the pilot,
though neither realized then the personal responsibility that Lampert felt over the incident.
Crendle pulled a small fragment of tough.
from his pocket and looked at it thoughtfully.
Nothing further was said until the helicopter landed once more on the river near the city.
McClockland and the bundle which held what was left of Takahiko Hitsui were waiting on the
bank and were loaded aboard without a sound.
It's early.
We'll take him back to Emera tonight and come back for your work tomorrow, Lampert said,
and lifted into the air without waiting for agreement.
"'All right,' replied Crendel, as long as we come back.
"'I don't think he'd have wanted us to stop.
I'm going to find out about those green threads of his, too.'
Lampert nodded in approval.
He had already formed a similar determination.
For half an hour they flew on in silence.
The Philodon, half submerged in swamp water a kilometer downstream from the hill,
heard the helicopter hum overhead.
It seemed totally disinterested.
For just a moment its fanged head pointed upward, then settled back again.
There was a burn under its jaw which had been inflicted by metal spraying from the ruined seismic apparatus.
It was more comfortable to keep it underwater.
What was it you found, Endami, that you thought Take would want to see?
Lampert broke the long silence.
It was when we were undercutting to get the block out of the tunnel,
Sulawayo answered.
"'It's just some more of his green threads, in the tough below the fossil.
I brought a chunk of the rock showing them here.'
Lampert nodded without taking his main attention from flying.
"'Maybe that fossil of yours was intelligent after all, then,' he said.
It seems to have died under very similar circumstances to take,
just above a set of those green threads.
Maybe it was a member of a party like ours.'
Maybe.
It certainly walked erect.
The whole body structure shows that.
If its brain were large enough and it had some sort of manipulating appendage, I'd say
it was virtually human in capacity, that is.
It was more of an amphibian anatomically.
You have the block out of the open.
Haven't you been able to study the head and limbs?"
No, damn it, Crendel took over from his junior.
That was the big disappointment in the whole thing.
find. The specimen seems to be perfect except for missing skull and hands. Not a trace of either.
The helicopter wavered slightly on its path, then steadied as Lampert forced his attention back
to his job. No one said anything for a long time, but everyone was thinking. Someone else was
thinking, too, but wasn't keeping his thoughts to himself. They were being spoken and virtually
dripped with the thinker's fury.
You sloppy, lazy parasites!
I don't mind being stuck with a job and a deadline,
even if it's a report that's due in only 50 years and needs about 200 for a real conclusion.
I'd sooner do it all myself than have some of you loose thinkers butting in.
But if I'm to give my whole attention to it so I can produce something that won't be
laughed at from here to the Magellanic clouds.
How about some of you watching what goes on on this planet?
I didn't know those creatures were poking around until they began cutting sensor lines.
Thirty, the protective life we bred on the surface was your idea.
Why didn't you put it to work?
The answering words tried to be soothing.
Thirty was working—dreaming, you mean?
But I put one of the guardians on the job for him.
It stopped the digging, didn't it?
Sure, after a lot of damage had been done.
Do you want to come out in the open and repair my wiring,
with those space travelers poking around?
If they find you at it, the council won't just laugh at us.
They'll excommunicate us and let this new species of intelligence clean us out.
Why did it take so long for the Guardian to do anything?
Well, I—
Well, you were dreaming, too, weren't you?
Blasted, you're here to do constructive thinking, not just to entertain yourself.
Haven't you any self-respect?
They actually dug out sixteen.
What difference will that make?
He's been dead too long to mind it himself, and anyway his brain and sensor connections were
decently burned.
But they wouldn't have had to dig much deeper to get someone who's not dead would date,
95, my young friend.
I suppose when they cut one or two of your sensors, you decided it was time to do something.
Don't interrupt, I'm talking.
This planet is supposed to be a quiet place where people can expect to spend a decent number
of centuries at a time thinking without being disturbed.
If you're too young or too lazy or just too stupid to do any real thinking yourself,
at least you can devote a little time from your casual amusements to making sure that other people can.
Shut up!
You'll do some thinking now or find yourself in real trouble.
Here's a problem for you to solve, and see that you solve it.
You get my sensors repaired, making sure not only the...
that you're not caught at the job by these space travelers, but also that they don't realize
it's been done.
In other words, don't just neatly fill in the hole they made after you finished so they
can't help knowing they're not the only intelligences on this world.
I don't know when they'll be back any better than you do.
So you'll have to guess at your own time limit.
You can booby-trap your canyon with landslides or anything else to keep yourself from being
dug out but if you fail in either problem and either of us looks likely to be found I
personally guarantee you'll be found in the same shape as sixteen now get to work
and let me think if you think you can get help or sympathy from anyone else on
the planet good luck to you a wave of agreement spread along the countless miles of
sensor wiring that extended through Veritas's crust.
But twenty-five didn't feel or hear it.
He had already taken the myriad of tendrils that terminated his arms away from the
Mosaic console that formed the end of the vast bundles of greenish threads coming through
the walls of his cave and had settled back in his lounging chair.
That report, only fifty years to have it thought out.
His full attention went back to it.
End of Port 8.
End of the Green Planet by Hal Clement.
